Create a Controller Portable Blood Glucose

European scientists are developing a portable device that will allow custom known diabetes, in minutes, the amount of glucose in your blood. The device will improve self-management of the disease and prevent damage by impairment of control. The device consists of sensors that will be attached to the body to detect a number of parameters like blood glucose or blood pressure.
With these data, patients may tune in the administration of doses, avoiding physiological complications arising from an excess of insulin. In four years it is expected that the technology is available on the market. Scientists say it is very necessary because diabetes is increasingly present in our society as a result of lifestyle we lead. For Yaiza Martínez.
Diabetics can reduce the amount of insulin that administrate with the help of a new portable and wireless device designed to predict blood glucose levels.
This device, known as “DIAdvisor ™” will be developed by the company Toumaz Technology, specializes in manufacturing wireless devices and low power consumption to control the body. The project falls under the Seventh Framework Program of the European Community, which has earmarked 7.1 million euros.
The purpose of development of this device is to improve the lives of millions of diabetes patients, with an art tool for personalized prediction of blood glucose levels, reports Toumaz Technology in a statement.
The tool will be created thanks to a partnership of 13 doctors and several industry partners and academics. The work will be coordinated by Novo Nordisk company specializing in the care of this disease.
What is
DIAdvisor technology (Personal Glucose Predictive Diabetes Advisor) will be based on a wireless control technology of the body, existing and belonging to the company Toumaz Technology Sensium call.
Sensors consist of small, wireless and discreet, surrounded by a silicium chip low-power, which will stick to the body of the sick to log certain data, such as body temperature, blood pressure, blood glucose levels or oxygen, among other parameters.
According to The Engineer magazine reported online, the system transmits this data to a portable mobile device like a PDA or PDA. By hand, it may also introduce any other information you want, like food that has consumed the patient.
All these data will be analyzed later by an advanced algorithm to determine glucose levels in the patient’s blood at any particular time. In this way, patients will know in a matter of minutes, the amount of insulin will be administered at the next dose.
Breakthrough
According to Keith Errey, co-founder and president of Project Toumaz, current techniques for managing diabetes does not offer the ability to predict blood glucose levels in the short term. This means that patients should almost assume the amount of insulin they need to recover the stable levels of blood glucose.
Scientists hope, moreover, that this technology serves to avoid the risk of blackouts suffered by diabetics when their blood sugar levels drop dramatically. Many of the sick, in fact, prefer to consume higher doses of insulin than necessary to avoid the crisis, but the excess insulin also has its risks, including possible damage to the eyes, heart or liver.
But before he can see the light DIAdvisor are still important steps to take, how to define the combination of vital signs that provide the best information to determine the blood glucose level. For this, scientists will have a team of volunteers with diabetes to help generate the physiological models and prediction algorithms.
Within two years, will begin clinical trials in which they will operate these algorithms in real time and test the prediction models. If everything runs according to plan for the scientists, the technology will be available in the market within four years.
Technology increasingly necessary
According to published Toumaz, the massive increase in the incidence of diabetes is now a major global health challenges. This increase is due to demographic trends clear, as the epidemic of obesity, aging, or the spread of sedentary lifestyles.
All these factors have caused a massive spread of diabetes, especially type 2. In the case of type 1 diabetes, the pancreas does not produce insulin, but in the pancreas of type 2 if that makes it, but the body assimilates as it should.
Consequently, the pancreas produces more insulin to get glucose into cells, and just exhausted due to excessive strain. In addition, blood sugar levels get too high.
In the European Union, the average prevalence of this disease is 7.5% but is expected to increase to 16% in 2025. Scientists hope that, with DIAdvisor, it can provide a sophisticated treatment of the sick, thus enhancing self-management of disease and reduce the risk of serious complications resulting from poor control of glucose levels in the blood.