Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
Health

How liver can improve diabetes management

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 14 Nov, 2014 11:12 AM
  • How liver can improve diabetes management
Finding a way to stimulate glucose accumulation in the liver could help manage diabetes and obesity, shows a new research, paving the way for new therapies to fight these increasingly common disorders.
 
The liver stores excess glucose, sugar, in the form of glycogen - chains of glucose - which is later released to cover body energy requirements.
 
Diabetic patients do not accumulate glucose well in the liver and this is one of the reasons why they suffer from hyperglycemia, that is to say, their blood sugar levels are too high.
 
“We have to find treatments to increase hepatic glucose because of its positive effect in diabetes and obesity,” said Joan Guinovart, head of the study from Institute for Research in Biomedicine (IRB Barcelona) in Spain.
 
“It is interesting to observe that what happens in the liver has direct effects on appetite. Here we reveal what occurs at the molecular level,” Guinovart explained.
 
The researchers questioned why mice that accumulated most glycogen in the liver did not gain weight in spite of having access to an appetising diet.
 
In addition to observing that these animals ate less, the scientists found that the brains of these animals showed scarce appetite-stimulating molecules but rather many appetite-suppressing ones.
 
The key to the liver-brain link is ATP, the molecule used by all living organisms to provide cells with energy and which is commonly altered in diabetes and obesity, the researchers found.
 
Nov 14 is World Diabetes Day. 
 
The World Health Organisation estimates that 382 million people worldwide currently live with diabetes and for 2035 it forecasts that one in every 10 people will have this disease.
 
The study appeared in the journal Diabetes.

MORE Health ARTICLES

Understanding parents have healthy kids

Understanding parents have healthy kids
How well parents understand the daily experiences of their teenagers is linked to the latter's physical and mental well-being, new research suggests....

Understanding parents have healthy kids

Stress ups Alzheimer's risk in shy women

Stress ups Alzheimer's risk in shy women
Women who worry, cope poorly with stress and experience mood swings in middle age run a higher risk of developing Alzheimer's disease later in life, it showed....

Stress ups Alzheimer's risk in shy women

Fish oil supplements don't reduce irregular heartbeat

Fish oil supplements don't reduce irregular heartbeat
Although rich in Omega-3 fatty acids, high doses of fish oil supplements do not reduce atrial fibrillation, a common type of irregular heartbeat, found...

Fish oil supplements don't reduce irregular heartbeat

'Women, men with high BP prescribed different drugs'

'Women, men with high BP prescribed different drugs'
Women who are treated for high blood pressure are not given the same medication as men nor do they hit the treatment targets as often, Swedish researchers say....

'Women, men with high BP prescribed different drugs'

Drug found effective in treating stress-related diabetes

Drug found effective in treating stress-related diabetes
Personalised treatment for Type 2 diabetes could be available soon as researchers have found that yohimbin, a drug that was de-registered for several years...

Drug found effective in treating stress-related diabetes

How Plasma Transfusions, Antibodies Like What Dallas Nurse Received Might Help Fight Ebola

How Plasma Transfusions, Antibodies Like What Dallas Nurse Received Might Help Fight Ebola
A Dallas nurse being treated for Ebola has received a plasma transfusion from a doctor who beat his own infection with the deadly virus after getting a similar treatment. The reason: Antibodies in the blood of a survivor may help a patient fight off the germ.

How Plasma Transfusions, Antibodies Like What Dallas Nurse Received Might Help Fight Ebola