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Insulin detemir, does a new century bring a better basal insulin?

Authors :
S V M, Hordern
D L, Russell-Jones
Source :
International journal of clinical practice. 59(6)
Publication Year :
2005

Abstract

The treatment of diabetes was revolutionised shortly after the turn of the twentieth century by the extraction and purification of insulin. Methods to protract (i.e. prolong) the action of insulin were developed in the 1930s; little changed in the technology of insulin protraction until the turn of this century when, with renewed interest in the importance of basal insulin in controlling diabetes and thus preventing or delaying complications, technology advanced again. Two new long-acting insulin analogues have come to the market; some may be familiar with insulin glargine, which has been widely used for some years now. This review attempts to describe the novel method of protraction that insulin detemir (launched last summer) employs by albumin binding, to discuss the possible therapeutic benefits of this method of protraction and to describe the findings of studies comparing insulin detemir with other currently available long-acting insulin preparations. The intention of this article is not to review all of the currently available long-acting insulin analogues.

Details

ISSN :
13685031
Volume :
59
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International journal of clinical practice
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........f40c2daae578836d3b3e7d41bd75b1fc