Low-volume, dual-rate, continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion (CSII) creates long periods of nearnormalization of blood glucose and major intermediary metabolites in most insulin-requiring diabetic patients. The technology and strategy of the system are discussed. We have observed encouraging clinical and fluorescein angiographic improvement in severe diabetic retinopathy after 3 mo of outpatient CSII; in the kidney, glomerular capillary permeability (microalbuminuria) is reduced or normalized in long-standing diabetic patients after a few days of CSII-induced strict control. Reduction in insulin dose during CSII treatment of newly diagnosed ketonuric diabetic patients may indicate improved B-cell function in this group. Although CSII must remain a research tool, undertaken only under close medical supervision, it is increasingly likely that the technique affords the conditions for testing the hypothesis that metabolic near-normalization of diabetes slows, arrests, or reverses the course of the microvascular disease associated with the syndrome.
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Proceedings of the Kroc Foundation International Conference|
March 01 1980
continuous Subcutaneous Insulin Infusion in the Treatment of Diabetes Mellitus
J C Pickup;
J C Pickup
Unit for Metabolic Medicine, Guy's Hospital Medical School
London
; Endocrine Unit, Hammersmith Hospital
London
; and National Institute for Medical Research
London
and Royal Victoria Infirmary, Newcastle-upon-Tyne
England
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H Keen;
H Keen
Unit for Metabolic Medicine, Guy's Hospital Medical School
London
; Endocrine Unit, Hammersmith Hospital
London
; and National Institute for Medical Research
London
and Royal Victoria Infirmary, Newcastle-upon-Tyne
England
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G C Viberti;
G C Viberti
Unit for Metabolic Medicine, Guy's Hospital Medical School
London
; Endocrine Unit, Hammersmith Hospital
London
; and National Institute for Medical Research
London
and Royal Victoria Infirmary, Newcastle-upon-Tyne
England
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M C White;
M C White
Unit for Metabolic Medicine, Guy's Hospital Medical School
London
; Endocrine Unit, Hammersmith Hospital
London
; and National Institute for Medical Research
London
and Royal Victoria Infirmary, Newcastle-upon-Tyne
England
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E M Kohner;
E M Kohner
Unit for Metabolic Medicine, Guy's Hospital Medical School
London
; Endocrine Unit, Hammersmith Hospital
London
; and National Institute for Medical Research
London
and Royal Victoria Infirmary, Newcastle-upon-Tyne
England
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J A Parsons;
J A Parsons
Unit for Metabolic Medicine, Guy's Hospital Medical School
London
; Endocrine Unit, Hammersmith Hospital
London
; and National Institute for Medical Research
London
and Royal Victoria Infirmary, Newcastle-upon-Tyne
England
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K G M M Alerti
K G M M Alerti
Unit for Metabolic Medicine, Guy's Hospital Medical School
London
; Endocrine Unit, Hammersmith Hospital
London
; and National Institute for Medical Research
London
and Royal Victoria Infirmary, Newcastle-upon-Tyne
England
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Address reprint requests to J. C. Pickup, Unit for Metabolic Medicine, Guy's Hospital Medical School, London, SE19RT, England.
Citation
J C Pickup, H Keen, G C Viberti, M C White, E M Kohner, J A Parsons, K G M M Alerti; continuous Subcutaneous Insulin Infusion in the Treatment of Diabetes Mellitus. Diabetes Care 1 March 1980; 3 (2): 290–300. https://doi.org/10.2337/diacare.3.2.290
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