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NTU Singapore scientists develop oral insulin nanoparticles that could one day be an alternative to injections

Date Time Share NTU Singapore scientists develop oral insulin nanoparticles that could one day be an alternative to injections Scientists at Nanyang Technological University, Singapore (NTU Singapore) have developed insulin nanoparticles that may one day become the basis for an oral medicine, and an alternative to insulin injections for diabetic patients. In a pre-clinical study, the NTU Singapore team fed insulin-containing nanoparticles to rats and found that insulin increased in their blood minutes later. Insulin therapy is often an important part of treatment for diabetes, a metabolic disease that affects 422 million people globally . In Singapore, the number of diabetics is expected to grow to 1 million – almost a fifth of the population – in 2050 .

Singapore
Subbu-venkatraman
Huang-yingying
Yusuf-ali
Lee-kong-chian-school-of-medicine-lkcmedicine
School-of-materials-science
Scientists-at-nanyang-technological-university
Nanyang-technological-university
Materials-science
Lee-kong-chian-school
Associate-professor-yusuf-ali
Professor-yusuf-ali

NTU Singapore develops oral insulin nanoparticles that could be an alternative to jabs

Loading video. VIDEO: Scientists at NTU Singapore have developed a layer-by-layer insulin nanoparticle that may one day form the basis for an oral medicine, and an alternative to insulin injections for diabetic patients. view more  Credit: NTU Singapore Scientists at Nanyang Technological University, Singapore (NTU Singapore) have developed insulin nanoparticles that may one day become the basis for an oral medicine, and an alternative to insulin injections for diabetic patients. In a pre-clinical study, the NTU Singapore team fed insulin-containing nanoparticles to rats and found that insulin increased in their blood minutes later. Insulin therapy is often an important part of treatment for diabetes, a metabolic disease that affects 422 million people globally . In Singapore, the number of diabetics is expected to grow to 1 million - almost a fifth of the population - in 2050 .

London
City-of
United-kingdom
Singapore
Foo-jie-ying
Subbu-venkatraman
Huang-yingying
Yusuf-ali
S-rajaratnam-school-of-international
Lee-kong-chian-school-of-medicine-lkcmedicine
Nanyang-technological-university
Lee-kong-chian-school-of-medicine

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