Inside Science
/
Article

Tortoise-Shaped Pill Injects Insulin Into Stomach Lining

FEB 07, 2019
Pill uses a dissolving spring-loaded needle to spare people with diabetes from normal injections.
Tortoise-Shaped Pill Injects Insulin Into Stomach Lining lead image

Tortoise-Shaped Pill Injects Insulin Into Stomach Lining lead image

Felice Frankel

(Inside Science) -- A pill shaped like a tortoise could one day help deliver insulin to people with diabetes, a new study finds.

Researchers have long sought ways to deliver insulin using pills instead of unpleasant injections. However, many medications are vulnerable to the acidity and digestive enzymes found in the digestive tract.

To overcome this challenge, researchers have developed an easily swallowed blueberry-sized capsule that can inject delicate molecules into the stomach lining. The stomach wall has no pain receptors, so the scientists believe that patients should not feel the injection.

To help the device settle against the inside of the stomach, the researchers drew inspiration from the leopard tortoise, which is found in eastern and southern Africa. The reptile’s domelike shell helps the tortoise right itself if it rolls onto its back. A similar shape would likely help the capsule orient itself along the bottom of the stomach wall to ensure its needle could find purchase, despite any forces that may jostle it about.

The tip of the device’s needle, made of freeze-dried insulin, is attached to a compressed spring that is held in place by a disk made of sugar. When water in the stomach dissolves the disk, the spring releases and injects the needle into the stomach wall.

In tests in pigs, the device successfully delivered up to 0.3 milligrams of insulin, enough to lower blood sugar to levels comparable to those produced via traditional injections. The scientists could also increase the dose to 5 milligrams, comparable to what someone with Type 2 diabetes would need.

The researchers saw no sign of tissue damage or other problems from the stomach injections. The device is made from biodegradable materials and stainless steel parts that should allow it to pass harmlessly through the gut after delivering the insulin.

Experiments also showed the device -- dubbed the self-orienting, millimeter-scale applicator, or SOMA -- could work for other drugs currently delivered via injection. “We anticipate our first human trials in the next three to five years,” said study co-senior author Giovanni Traverso, a gastroenterologist and biomedical engineer at Harvard Medical School in Boston.

The scientists detailed their findings in the Feb. 8 issue of the journal Science.

More Science News
/
Article
Researchers developed a way to create focused nylon-water composite jets, which can destroy explosives more safely.
/
Article
By uncovering the mechanics of spatially confined metal selenide energy storage, researchers can create better batteries.
/
Article
Combination of cubic-spline interpolation and AI transformer refines models when sensors are sparse
/
Article
Investigation into the internal flow mechanism of underwater supersonic gas jets generated by beveled novels provides insight into underwater vehicle design.
/
Article
To go beyond classical models and tie our understanding of gravity to the quantum world, experiments are needed.
/
Article
Coalescing at a relatively low temperature may have helped the moon become the only one in the solar system to develop a magnetic field.
/
Article
/
Article
The first African American physicist to earn a PhD made the best of a difficult career path.