INJECTIONS TO TREAT DIABETES BEGAN IN 1922

100 years of insulin | Penn Today
Canadian scientists Frederick Banting (right) and Charles
Best.

On January 11, 1922, 14-year-old Leonard Thompson becomes
the
first person to receive an injection of the hormone insulin
for Type-1 diabetes—a disease that for millennia had been
considered a death sentence for anyone who developed it. 
Thompson’s blood sugar levels stabilized and he suffered
no ill side effects. He became the face of a new wonder drug.

The breakthrough research behind insulin came at the
University of Toronto in the
summer of 1921, when
Canadians Frederick Banting and Charles Best
successfully isolated insulin from canine test
subjects,

The breakthrough would be one of the most consequential
in medical history, saving millions of lives.

100 years of insulin | Penn Today
Laboratory on the University of Toronto campus where
Banting and Best carried out some of their research on
insulin.

Insulin Development and Commercialization - American Chemical Society

Banting and Best Discover Insulin

100 years of insulin | Penn Today

posted by Bob Karm in ANNIVERSARY,Diabetes,HISTORY,Injection,Medical,NEWSPAPER and have No Comments

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