Researchers at the University of Copenhagen found in a new study that each person’s body responds to insulin in a different way, according to .
This hormone, which plays an important role in regulating blood sugar and diabetes, affects people who are even healthy or with type 2 diabetes. Such a discovery transforms the diagnosis of type 2 diabetes and its treatment, thus leading to a faster tracking of the patient and even before it is fully forming in the body.
Typically, people are categorized into two categories: healthy or with diabetes. Although this method is efficient because of its simplicity, it ignores the complex biological nature of insulin function in the human body. This assumption considers a single model for everyone in a group and ignores the subtle differences in insulin sensitivity that are subtle and molecular level. There is such a distinction even among those who look clinically similar.
“We have noticed a significant distinction between insulin sensitivity even between healthy people as well as people with type II diabetes,” writes Atol Enemy from the University of Copenhagen. Some people with type 2 diabetes respond better to insulin than healthy people.
Researchers from a new method of protein analysis called protein (proteinProteomics) Used to examine how insulin’s effect on muscle tissue. This method allowed researchers to map molecular changes in muscle biopsy of more than 5 people.
This molecular signature in the future will help physicians track the risk of the disease before the symptoms emerge, which provides a path to personalized diabetes care.
This analysis showed that fixed protein changes occur as insulin resistance progresses. These molecular signatures lead to identifying people at risk of developing disease earlier than current methods.
(Tagstotranslate) Scientific Research (T) Diabetes (T) Medical Services
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