Category: Applied human ethics. Sapere aude – Wage zu Wissen (I. Kant)
Belinda S. Lennerz, Anna Barton, Richard K. Bernstein, R. David Dikeman, Carrie Diulus, Sarah Hallberg, Erinn T. Rhodes, Cara B. Ebbeling, Eric C. Westman, William S. Yancy and David S. Ludwig Pediatrics June 2018, 141 (6) e20173349; DOI: https://doi.org/10.1542/peds.2017-3349
https://pediatrics.aappublications.org/content/141/6/e20173349
Read full article:
https://medtechblog.com/tag/cellnovo/
„In the Beginning
The first attempt at a “portable” insulin pump was made back in the 1960s by Dr. Arnold Kadish, a private doctor in Beverly Hills, CA. His backpack-sized contraption (pictured below) was in some ways years ahead of its time, ambitiously seeking to act as an artificial pancreas—which is still considered to be the holy grail of this field—through a closed-loop insulin delivery system consisting of an adapted lab Autoanalyser to measure blood glucose, a venous blood circuit and a servo-mechanism pump. While this represented an important proof-of-concept, the system’s size, complexity and its dependance on intravenous access made it impractical.
Kadish artificial pancreas from 1960s

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