Insulin precipitation is a major obstacle to the use of implantable insulin infusion pumps. In one such pump (Infusaid, Infusaid Corporation, Norwood, Massachusetts), unprotected insulin precipitated and occluded nine pumps implanted in normal dogs within 43 days. In contrast, two similar pumps containing insulin mixed with 80% glycerol functioned normally for more than 250 days. In human studies, a similar mixture allowed insulin to be delivered to nine diabetic subjects for more than 6 mo in each case; total fluid flow rates from the pump were essentially unchanged after 460 patients-weeks of insulin infusion. A possible drawback of the mixture is a time- and temperature-dependent propensity to cause the formation of soluble, higher-molecular-weight insulin polymers, which apparently have lower biologic activity. Formation of such polymers and maintenance of biologic activity were largely prevented by the addition of phosphate buffer at neutral pH.
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Original Articles|
July 01 1983
Glycerol Prevents Insulin Precipitation and Interruption of Flow in an Implantable Insulin Infusion Pump
Perry J Blackshear, M.D., D.Phil.;
Perry J Blackshear, M.D., D.Phil.
Diabetes Unit and Medical Services, Massachusetts General Hospital, and the Department of Medicine, Harvard Medical School
Boston, Massachusetts
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Thomas D Rohde, M.S.;
Thomas D Rohde, M.S.
Department of Surgery, University of Minnesota Hospitals
Minneapolis, Minnesota
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John L Palmer, Ph.D.;
John L Palmer, Ph.D.
Diabetes Unit and Medical Services, Massachusetts General Hospital, and the Department of Medicine, Harvard Medical School
Boston, Massachusetts
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Bruce D Wigness, B.S.;
Bruce D Wigness, B.S.
Department of Surgery, University of Minnesota Hospitals
Minneapolis, Minnesota
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William M Rupp, M.D.;
William M Rupp, M.D.
Department of Surgery, University of Minnesota Hospitals
Minneapolis, Minnesota
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Henry Buchwald, M.D., Ph.D.
Henry Buchwald, M.D., Ph.D.
Department of Surgery, University of Minnesota Hospitals
Minneapolis, Minnesota
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Address reprint requests to Dr. P. J. Blackshear, Diabetes Unit, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts 02114.
Citation
Perry J Blackshear, Thomas D Rohde, John L Palmer, Bruce D Wigness, William M Rupp, Henry Buchwald; Glycerol Prevents Insulin Precipitation and Interruption of Flow in an Implantable Insulin Infusion Pump. Diabetes Care 1 July 1983; 6 (4): 387–392. https://doi.org/10.2337/diacare.6.4.387
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