| Literature DB >> 32232090 |
Abstract
The incidence of Diabetes Mellitus is on the rise worldwide, which exerts enormous health toll on the population and enormous pressure on the healthcare systems. Now, almost hundred years after the discovery of insulin in 1921, the optimization problem of diabetes is well formulated as maintenance of strict glycemic control without increasing the risk for hypoglycemia. External insulin administration is mandatory for people with type 1 diabetes; various medications, as well as basal and prandial insulin, are included in the daily treatment of type 2 diabetes. This review follows the development of the Diabetes Technology field which, since the 1970s, progressed remarkably through continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion (CSII), mathematical models and computer simulation of the human metabolic system, real-time continuous glucose monitoring (CGM), and control algorithms driving closed-loop control systems known as the "artificial pancreas" (AP). All of these developments included significant engineering advances and substantial bioelectronics progress in the sensing of blood glucose levels, insulin delivery, and control design. The key technologies that enabled contemporary AP systems are CSII and CGM, both of which became available and sufficiently portable in the beginning of this century. This powered the quest for wearable home-use AP, which is now under way with prototypes tested in outpatient studies during the past 6 years. Pivotal trials of new AP technologies are ongoing, and the first hybrid closed-loop system has been approved by the FDA for clinical use. Thus, the closed-loop AP is well on its way to become the digital-age treatment of diabetes.Entities:
Keywords: Artificial pancreas (AP); Closed-loop control; Continuous glucose monitoring (CGM); Continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion (CSII); Diabetes; Hyperglycemia; Hypoglycemia; Insulin pumps
Year: 2018 PMID: 32232090 PMCID: PMC7098217 DOI: 10.1186/s42234-018-0015-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bioelectron Med ISSN: 2332-8886
Fig. 1The Treatment Ecosystem of diabetes – a combination of superimposed interacting processes developing at different time scales
Fig. 2Timeline of diabetes technology development following the discovery of insulin in 1921
Fig. 3The two principal configurations of a wearable artificial pancreas: embedded, with a control algorithm running on board of an insulin pump, and mobile, using consumer electronics as a computational and communication hub. Both configurations have their advantages and disadvantages