A glucosamine-like dietary supplement has been found to suppress the damaging autoimmune response seen in type 1 diabetes, according to University of California, Irvine health sciences researchers.
In studies on mice, researchers found that N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc), which is similar but more effective than the widely available glucosamine, inhibited the growth and function of hyperactive T-cells that cause diabetes. GlcNAc increased sugar modifications to the T-cell proteins, preventing the hyperactive immune response. This therapy normalized T-cell functions and prevented development of high blood glucose levels in type 1 diabetes.
GlcNAc decreases pain and inflammation, which likens the results of the Irvine study to a study that was conducted in Toronto last December. Researchers found they were able to cure diabetic mice overnight by injecting them with something called Substance P. Substance P is involved in the transmission of pain impulses from peripheral receptors to the central nervous system. Diabetes is like a rat without the ability to feel pain. The naked mole rat lacks Substance P and cannot feel pain when painful stimuli are administered to the skin. Snapple fact, folks!


Now that the US market is suspiciously saturated with human insulin - and many of us diagnosed within the last 10 years did not have a shot at trying porcine insulin - I'd like to set the record straight. When the pharmaceutical companies cherry pick the studies they wish to use for their gain, and not so much for your enhanced quality of life - they must've lost 







