The Latest Biology News And Medical NewsBiology News 2Health News 2Biology News 3Health News 3
HOME >> MEDICINE >> NEWS
New study finds PET imaging value in tracking diabetes progression

"Diabetes is the only major disease with a death rate that continues to be on the upswing," proclaimed a front-page New York Times story this week. Now, for the first time, researchers at Columbia University Medical Center have identified a reliable, non-invasive imaging method that may eventually enable more precise care of people with diabetes by measuring their quantity of insulin-producing pancreatic beta cells.

A preclinical study demonstrating that beta cells can be non-invasively imaged in rats is being published online this week (5/18, 5pm EDT) in the Journal of Clinical Investigation (June print issue). Led by a Columbia University Medical Center research team, the paper details the application of a PET imaging method, already widely used for brain imaging, for beta cell mass measurement in diabetes.

Diabetes results when insulin-producing beta cells, located within the pancreas, fail. A goal of treatment is to increase, or at least preserve, the number of insulin-producing beta cells. For years, doctors have been stymied trying to develop a screening method to measure beta cells: the pancreas, located deep within the abdomen, is largely inaccessible to biopsies.

Paul E. Harris, Ph.D., principal investigator, and his research team at Columbia identified a molecule expressed in beta cells, VMAT2, which also happens to be expressed in tissues of the central nervous system. By injecting the rats with a radioactive form of DTBZ, which binds directly to the VMAT2 within beta cells, they're able to easily see and analyze the beta cells during PET scans.

This imaging method will be studied for the first time in human subjects in a trial expected to begin within the next few weeks at the Naomi Berrie Diabetes Center, Columbia University Medical Center. The goals are to assess the quantity of beta cells in healthy individuals and patients with type I diabetes.

The long-term possibilities include providing more detailed
'"/>

Contact: Elizabeth Streich
eas2125@columbia.edu
212-305-6535
Columbia University Medical Center
18-May-2006


Page: 1 2

Related medicine news :

1. Childhood obesity indicates greater risk of school absenteeism, Penn study reveals
2. Penn study finds pro-death proteins required to regulate healthy immune function
3. New study shows promise in reducing surgical risks associated with surgical bleeding
4. New study counts the economic cost of persistent pain in Australia
5. UCLA researchers awarded $9M contract for study identifiying antibiotic treatment for MRSA
6. Most seniors now have drug coverage, U-M study shows
7. To gain muscle and lose fat, drink milk: study
8. Wheres the beef? Not enough of it is on elders plates, muscle-metabolism study suggests
9. Even older women at high risk have little interest in being tested for HIV, study finds
10. Metabolic study in mice could lead to good cholesterol boosters
11. Michigan-CDC study supports value of social restrictions during influenza pandemics

Post Your Comments:
*Name:
*Comment:
*Email:
TAG: New study finds PET imaging value tracking diabetes progression

(Date:11/25/2009)... air on flesh that mimicked parts of speech colore...v. 25 (HealthDay News) -- People can "hear" not on...research shows. , In fact, sensations on the sk...lly helped people decipher sounds better, the Cana...le to show whether we could use tactile informatio...
(Date:11/25/2009)... Initiative expands to include cost-effective...hers, and healthcare professionals in developing w...RWEB) November 25, 2009 -- Elluminate, Inc. , the...g solutions that support 21st century teaching, l...ts Fire and Ice initiative was awarded iNACOL,s...
(Date:11/25/2009)...ov.25/PRNewswire-FirstCall/--TheAdvisoryBoardCompa...teinthe21stAnnualPiperJaffrayHealthCareConferencei...009at3:00PM(EST),willbetheCompany,sChiefExecutiveO...ancialOfficer,MichaelT.Kirshbaum.Thepresentationma...t http://www.advisoryboardcompany.com ,throughDece...
(Date:11/25/2009)...ich.,Nov.25/PRNewswire/--TwomoreH1N1vaccineclinics...5,theMacombCountyHealthDepartmentannouncedtoday.Th...omHillCountyParkinSterlingHeights. ,, TheDec.3c...rom9a.m.to3p.m.Thethimerosol-freeversionoftheinjec...eslast.Bothinjectableandnasalsprayimmunizationwill...
(Date:11/25/2009)...rgestDonationEverMadeinSupportofFeedingAmerica,sSN...-USNewswire/--FeedingAmerica,thenation,slargesthun...ationfromtheBankofAmericaCharitableFoundationtosup...icanswiththeSupplementalNutritionAssistanceProgram...llbeusedtohelpFeedingAmericafoodbanksimproveaccess...
Breaking Medicine News(10 mins):Health News:Your Skin Can Help Your Ears Listen 2Health News:Your Skin Can Help Your Ears Listen 3Health News:Elluminate's Fire and Ice Project Recognized as First-Ever iNACOL Award Winner for Outstanding and Most Innovative Online Learning Practice 2Health News:Elluminate's Fire and Ice Project Recognized as First-Ever iNACOL Award Winner for Outstanding and Most Innovative Online Learning Practice 3Health News:Elluminate's Fire and Ice Project Recognized as First-Ever iNACOL Award Winner for Outstanding and Most Innovative Online Learning Practice 4Health News:Elluminate's Fire and Ice Project Recognized as First-Ever iNACOL Award Winner for Outstanding and Most Innovative Online Learning Practice 5Health News:Macomb County Health Department Schedules Two More H1N1 Flu Vaccine Clinics Dec. 3 and 5 2Health News:Bank of America Charitable Foundation Presents $1 Million Contribution to Feeding America in an Effort to Help Connect Low-Income Americans With Federal Nutrition Programs 2Health News:Bank of America Charitable Foundation Presents $1 Million Contribution to Feeding America in an Effort to Help Connect Low-Income Americans With Federal Nutrition Programs 3
(Date:11/24/2009)...4/PRNewswire-FirstCall/--Vermillion,Inc.(VRML)(Pin...rganizationandDisclosureStatementtoday,November24,...ictofDelaware.AhearingtoconsiderapprovaloftheDiscl...9,withthehearingontheconfirmationofthePlanschedule...topayallclaimsinfull.ThePlanisexpected,ifapproved,...
(Date:11/24/2009)...wswire/--Accumetrics,Inc.,aprivately-helddeveloper...dandeasy-to-usediagnosticsystemformeasuringanindiv...avix®andaspirin),announcedtodaythatTimothyI.S...itts,ChiefFinancialOfficerofAccumetrics,willbepres...yHealthCareConferencebeingheldinNewYorkCityonDecem...
(Date:11/24/2009)...wswire/--AmbitBiosciencesCorporationannouncedtoday...0,anovelsecondgenerationFLT3inhibitor,inAMLatthe51...eheldinNewOrleans,LA,December5-8,2009.Anoralpresen...seImonotherapysafetystudyinadultswithacutemyeloidl...esentedevaluatingtheeffectofAC220monotherapyandinc...
Breaking Medicine Technology:Vermillion Files Plan of Reorganization 2Vermillion Files Plan of Reorganization 3Accumetrics to Present at the 21st Annual Piper Jaffray Health Care Conference 2Ambit Biosciences Corporation Announces Presentations Profiling AC220 Clinical and Non-Clinical Data at 51st American Society of Hematology Annual Meeting 2Ambit Biosciences Corporation Announces Presentations Profiling AC220 Clinical and Non-Clinical Data at 51st American Society of Hematology Annual Meeting 3Annual survey shows high numbers of seed scallops on Georges Bank low numbers in Mid Atlantic 9598 1Annual survey shows high numbers of seed scallops on Georges Bank low numbers in Mid Atlantic 9598 2Annual survey shows high numbers of seed scallops on Georges Bank low numbers in Mid Atlantic 9598 3Annual survey shows high numbers of seed scallops on Georges Bank low numbers in Mid Atlantic 9598 4New DNA test uses nanotechnology to find early signs of cancer 9596 1New DNA test uses nanotechnology to find early signs of cancer 9596 2New DNA test uses nanotechnology to find early signs of cancer 9596 3The first gene encoded amphibian toxin isolated 9594 1
Other News:
...wn that a single 2.5mg dose of vitamin D may be en...uberculosis (TB) and similar bacteria for at least...entified an extraordinarily high incidence of vita...on most at risk from the disease, which kills arou...
...zona scientist who has specialized in studying how... a million-dollar grant to conduct a pioneering 5-...play when the human brain hears and processes spok...ultimate form of animal communication -- language,...
..., May 15, 2007 -- A new study from researchers at ...outhern California (USC) shows that treadmill exer...e and those with similar movement disorders.... Th...ec, Ph.D., assistant professor of neurology and ap...
... baby is doing what other babies her age are doing...hes and she loves to dance."... Lolita Harding is ...hree in September, thanks in large part to a thymu...al Center in April 2005 to reconstitute her absent...
health news:Vitamin D supplements may offer cheap and effective immune system boost against TB 2health news:Vitamin D supplements may offer cheap and effective immune system boost against TB 3health news:Pioneering study maps attention, memory and language links in the human brain 2health news:Pioneering study maps attention, memory and language links in the human brain 3health news:Exercise may lead to improvement in patients with Parkinson's 2health news:Thymus transplants gives hope to babies with fatal immune disease 2health news:Thymus transplants gives hope to babies with fatal immune disease 3
New studies in mice indicate low doses of chemotherapy drugs given more frequently than usual and in tinier doses may target the process by which a new blood supply is created feeding tumor growth, ca
STANFORD, Calif. - Researchers at Stanford University Medical Center have been spreading colds to cancer patients, all in the hope of curing a deadly disease. In the unusual technique, doctors inject
...ea may be doing more than soothing a weary stomach...archers at the Keck School of Medicine of USC and ...onducted in Shanghai, China were about half as lik...as similar study participants who showed little ev...
...nto the heart to prevent blood clots could reduce ...tion (AF), researchers report in todays rapid acc...rican Heart Association....About 2 million America... type of irregular heartbeat. About 15 percent of...
health news:Jefferson study shows low concentrations of chemotherapy drugs have antiangiogenic effects 2health news:Stanford researcher's uncommon approach to common cold fights cancer 2health news:Stanford researcher's uncommon approach to common cold fights cancer 3health news:Polyphenols in tea may reduce risk of stomach, esophagus cancers 2health news:Tiny device blocks 'useless' part of heart, prevents blood clots 2health news:Tiny device blocks 'useless' part of heart, prevents blood clots 3