The Michigan Daily-Friday, May 25, 1979-Page 7 Implantable insulin pump could help diabetics BERKELEY, Calif. (AP)-A Cali- fornia firm has built a prototype of an implantable insulin pump that could free severe diabetics from daily insulin shots, officials of the firm said yester- day. George Shapiro, president of Andros Inc. of Berkeley, said the device would be implanted in the body like a heart pacemaker. The pump would supply a steady flow of insulin that could help reduce problems. of loss of vision, kidney failure, and heart disease that many diabetics suffer, said Dr. Peter For- sham, who helped develop the device. FORSHAM, DIRECTOR of the Metabolic Research Unit at the Univer- sity of California,-San Francisco, and himself a diabetic, said the pump could be on the market in four years if tests prove its worth. But he said the device has been used so far only in dogs-not humans. For- sham said much more testing was needed. There are an estimated 10 million diabetics in the United States but only about 1.5 million of them need daily in- sulin shots. ONE OF THE main problems with diabetics is maintaining the proper level of insulin in the blood. The shots help diabetics controll their blood sugar levels. But shots do not provide the same fine-tuned control as the pancreas, the natural insulin sup- ply. And many doctors think the bad side effects of diabetics result from ac- cumulated small insulin imbalances. Dr. William Tamborlane and others at Yale University recently published a report on using an external battery- powered insulin pump to control diabetics in children. They said the pump kept blood sugar levels lower and more steady than injections. THE PROTOTYPE of the implan- table device, about the size of a large pocket watch, weighs just a few ounces and consists of a microprocessor, power supply, drug reservoir and a small pump. Shapiro said a concentrated form of insulin now under development will allow the device to carry a four-month supply of the hormone, which allows the body to use sugar and other car- bohydrates. The implant would be refilled by injection through a self- sealing port. The implantable insulin pump was an offshoot of another project the company has been working on, an implantable heart pump, he said. IT RELEASES a preprogrammed dose of insulin at a fixed rate but allows the patient to increase dose before meals and during stress, whenthe need for the drug increases. "One of the major issues is how will the insulin be delivered into the body,' Shapiro said. "The two positions that seem most interesting now are in the thigh and just below the collarbone, which is where heart pacemakers go," Shapiro said. The company is now seeking $1 million financial backing to develop the device, Shapiro said. He said it should cost from $1,500 to $5,000 to patients. Doily Photo by JIM KRUZ Cantat cani Guitarist Steve Osburn serenades a politely posed canine outside the Graduate Library. The listener refused to reveal his or her identity. He was tough enough for the streets.... was he tough enough to leave them? 603 east liberty MICH IGA N Theatre Phone 665-6290 STARTS fTONIGH FRI. 7:30-11:20 SAT. and SUN. 1:30 3:30 5:30 7:30 EXTRAII TONIGHT ONLY AT 9:30 ADVANCE SHO WING of iS A Love Story Beyond Words ROBBY BENSON ' SARAH HOLCOMB - A TURMANFOSTER Co. ProductionWALK PROUD Written by EVAN HUNTER Produced by LAWRENCE IURMAN - Directed by ROBERT COLTN A Universal Picture Read the BANTAM BOK L""""""" , ' " ADIOS Y ESTERDAY" T he sing" as sung oy Robbny Sonson *v$a lal on MCA Recods