The condition known today as diabetes (usually referring to diabetes mellitus) is thought to have been described in the Ebers Papyrus (c. 1550 BCE). Ayurvedic physicians (5th/6th century BCE) first noted the sweet taste of diabetic urine, and called the condition madhumeha ("honey urine"). The term "diabetes" traces back to Demetrius of Apamea (1st century BCE). For a long time, the condition was described and treated in traditional Chinese medicine as xiāo kě (消渴; "wasting-thirst"). Physicians of the medieval Islamic world, including Avicenna, have also written on diabetes. Early accounts often referred to diabetes as a disease of the kidneys. In 1674, Thomas Willis suggested that diabetes may be a disease of the blood. Johann Peter Frank is credited with distinguishing diabetes mellitus and diabetes insipidus in 1794.
In regard to diabetes mellitus, Joseph von Mering and Oskar Minkowski
are commonly credited with the formal discovery (1889) of a role for
the pancreas in causing the condition. In 1893, Édouard Laguesse
suggested that the islet cells of the pancreas, described as "little
heaps of cells" by Paul Langerhans in 1869, might play a regulatory role
in digestion. These cells were named Islets of Langerhans after the
original discoverer. In the beginning of the 20th century, physicians
hypothesized that the islets secrete a substance (named "insulin") that
metabolises carbohydrates. The discovery and purification of insulin for
clinical use between 1921-1922 by a group of researchers in Toronto—Frederick Banting, J.J.R. Macleod, Charles Best, and James Collip—paved the way for treatment. The patent for insulin was assigned to the University of Toronto in 1923 for a symbolic dollar to keep treatment accessible.
In regard to diabetes insipidus, treatment became available before the causes of the disease were clarified. The discovery of an anti-diuretic substance extracted from the pituitary gland
by researchers in Italy (A. Farini and B. Ceccaroni) and Germany (R.
Von den Velden) in 1913 paved the way for treatment. By the 1920s,
accumulated findings defined diabetes insipidus as a disorder of the
pituitary. The main question now became whether the cause of diabetes
insipidus lay in the pituitary gland or the hypothalamus, given their intimate connection. In 1954, Berta and Ernst Scharrer concluded that the hormones were produced by the nuclei of cells in the hypothalamus.
Early accounts
Ancient Egypt (c. 1550 BCE)
The Ebers Papyrus is among the oldest and most important medical papyri of Ancient Egypt. Written circa 1550 BCE, it was likely copied from a series of much earlier texts, and contains a passage from the First Dynasty (c. 3400 BCE). The document is named after Georg Ebers, who purchased the document in 1872 in the city of Luxor, the site of Thebes (known to Ancient Egyptians as Waset). Thebes was the most venerated city of Ancient Egypt in its heyday during the Middle Kingdom and New Kingdom.
The Ebers Papyrus is thought to contain the first known medical
reference to diabetes, by the phrase: "...to eliminate urine which is
too asha". The crucial word asha can mean both "plentiful" and "often". It is unclear whether the condition described was excessive urine (polyuria), which may have been symptomatic of diabetes, or increased frequency of urine, very often due to urinary tract infection.
The following mixture was prescribed for treatment: "A measuring
glass filled with Water from the Bird pond, Elderberry, Fibres of the
asit plant, Fresh Milk, Beer-Swill, Flower of the Cucumber, and Green
Dates". Urinary troubles in the adult were also corrected with "rectal
injections of olive oil, honey, sweet beer, sea salt, and seeds of the
wonderfruit".
Ayurveda (5th/6th century BCE)
Ayurveda is a Hindu system of medicine with historic roots in the Indian subcontinent. Some of its conceptual origins trace back to the Indus Valley Civilisation. It developed significantly through the Vedic period.
Polyuria in diabetes was associated with a sweet taste in Sanskrit texts of the 5th/6th century BCE, at the time of two notable physicians Sushruta and Charaka. They described several diseases of polyuric nature collectively called Prameha ("to flow"). Included in this group of ailments was the equivalent of diabetes mellitus, madhumeha
("honey urine"), named as such because the sweet urine of patients
would attract ants and flies. These patients are said to have suffered
from extreme thirst and foul breath.
Ayurvedic texts provided dietary prescriptions for the condition.
They constitute the earliest known references to the presence of sugar
in the urine (glycosuria)
and to dietary remedies, at least a thousand years before modern
European descriptions began to more comprehensively conceptualize the
disease. Sushruta and Charaka also identified the two types of diabetes mellitus, later dubbed Type I and Type II diabetes.
Ancient China
Modern-day diabetes is associated with two terms in the Chinese language. The traditional term, xiāo kě
(消渴), means "wasting-thirst" and correlates closely with diabetes in
most instances of historical description. The more modern term, táng niǎo bìng (糖尿病), means "sugar urine disease", and is equivalent to diabetes mellitus. It has been suggested that the modern term is derived from exchanges with Ayurvedic practitioners who called the condition madhumeha ("honey urine"). Within the Sinosphere (regions of East and Southeast Asia historically influenced by the linguistic and literary traditions of the Chinese empire), this etymology has also been borrowed into Korean (tang nyo byeong [당뇨병]) and Japanese (tou nyo byou [とうにょうびょう]).
Reviews of diabetology history in Traditional Chinese medicine have classified the diagnosis and treatment of xiāo kě (消渴) into four periods, summarized below.
Classic texts provided a typology of the condition and outlined various
recommendations on diagnosis, development, treatment, and prevention. Knowledge of wasting-thirst was integrated with knowledge of diabetes during the Qing dynasty.
The Yellow Emperor's Classic of Internal Medicine (475 BCE-8 CE)
Huángdì Nèijīng (黃帝內經), or The Yellow Emperor's Classic of Internal Medicine, is a fundamental ancient text in Chinese medicine and a major book of Daoist philosophy and lifestyle. It is generally dated to the late Warring States period (475-221 BCE) and the Western Han dynasty (206 BCE-8 CE).
The text named the condition xiāo kě (消渴;
"wasting-thirst") and elaborated on it through 25 clauses. It recorded
such symptoms as "three increases [excess] and one decrease [loss]":
excessive thirst (polydypsia), excessive hunger (polyphagia), excessive urine (polyuria), and weight loss. Three sub-phases of xiāo kě were given, characterized by their dominant symptoms. These roughly correspond to the progressive stages of diabetes in modern-day Western medicine.
The Treatise on Cold Damage and Miscellaneous Diseases (9-280 CE)
Shānghán Zábìng Lùn (傷寒雜病論), or The Treatise on Cold Damage and Miscellaneous Diseases , is the first Chinese monograph on diseases by Zhang Zhongjing. The original work is lost, but most of its contents are preserved in two extant works called Shānghán Lùn (傷寒論; "The Treatise on Cold Damage") and Jīnguì Yàolüè
(金匱要略; "Essential Prescriptions from the Golden Chamber"). The first
work primarily addresses externally triggered conditions while the
latter work describes internally generated conditions.
Zhang's specialized chapter on xiāo kě is found in Shānghán Lùn and Jīnguì Yàolüè.
Nine subsections and nine formulae (herbal remedies) on wasting-thirst
were recorded. The text proposed a theory of "three wasting-thirsts":
upper- (associated with the lungs), middle- (associated with the
stomach), and lower- (associated with the kidneys), all three of which
shared excessive urine and thirst as symptoms. This theory was later
expanded through the works of Liu Wansu (1120-1200 CE) and Wang Kentang
(1549-1613 CE). According to Liu, "lower wasting-thirst" attributed to
"kidney-yin deficiency" was associated with sweet urine (glycosuria). This may indicate differentiation akin to modern-day differentiation of diabetes mellitus and diabetes insipidus.
Extensive development of "wasting-thirst" (265-1368)
The diagnosis and treatment of xiāo kě was expanded significantly through the Sui (581-618) and Tang (618-907) dynasties. Zeng Liyan (545-649) expounded on the diagnosis of modern-day diabetes mellitus through the presence of sugar in the urine (glycosuria). This characterization was echoed by other physicians in the centuries that followed. Notably, in Wàitái Mìyào (外臺秘要; "Medical Secrets of an Official") written in 752, Wang Tao (fl. 8th century CE) included a detailed case report of sweet urine and a summary of diabetology history before the Tang dynasty.
Sun Simiao (581-682 CE) further developed approaches to treatment, prevention, regulation, nursing, and convalescence. The formulae for wasting-thirst grew from one in The Yellow Emperor's Classic of Internal Medicine, to nine in Zhang Zhongjing's works, to 73 in Sun Simiao's. The selection of herbs grew from one (Eupatorium Fortunei), to dozens used by Zhang, to over one hundred used by Sun.
Integration of Chinese and Western medicine (1368-1949)
During the Ming (1368-1644) and Qing
(1644-1912) dynasties, medical discoveries slowed but practitioners
achieved significant knowledge integration across cultures. Over one
hundred comprehensive medical monographs were cultivated, many
synthesizing developments in the study of wasting-thirst and of
diabetes.
Zhang Xichun (1860-1933), a renowned integrator of medical knowledge, produced (among other works) Yīxué zhōng zhōng cānxī lù (医学衷中参西录; "The Integration of Traditional Chinese and Western Medicine"). In a dedicated chapter named "Xiāo-kě therapies", he discussed the following aspects synthesizing wasting-thirst and diabetes: nomenclature, theories (pathologies), primary formulae, medications (herbology and pharmacology), nursing (diet and maintenance), medical cases, and integrated analysis (protein and essence; qi and fluids).
Yu Yunxiu (1879-1954), a Japanese-educated practitioner of Western medicine aligned with the modernizer camp of the Chinese Ministry of Health, attempted to forbid the practice of Chinese medicine in 1929. In 1939, he wrote on the rough equivalence of wasting-thirst and diabetes.
Classical antiquity
Greco-Roman accounts of what we now know as diabetes primarily describe excessive urination (polyuria).
There is no known account of sweetness in early Greco-Roman concepts of
the disease. Given the lasting legacy of classical medicine, these
descriptions remained highly influential into the Middle Ages in Europe.
Greek writers
It is assumed that the Hippocratic Corpus
bears no direct mention of what we now know as diabetes. However, a
number of indirect statements referring to excessive and "watery urine"
suggest that Hippocratic writers may have been familiar with the
condition.
The term "diabetes" is derived from the Ionic for "siphon",
meaning "to pass or run through". It reflects the dominant notion at
the time that fluids consumed by the diabetic patient passed through the
body unchanged, as if flowing through a tube or siphon. A number of conflicting accounts exist as to the first use of this term, placing the originator as either Apollonius of Memphis (fl. 3rd century BCE), Demetrius of Apamea (fl. 100 BCE), or Aretaeus of Cappadocia (fl. early 2nd century CE). In-depth probes of Greek etymology agree that the term came from Demetrius of Apamea. C.L. Gemmill (1972) states:
Caelius Aurelianus prepared a Latin version of the works of Soranus. In the index of the Drabkin edition there is a subject heading "Diabetes," but on examination of the text this section could not be found (footnote 3, p. 776) except for a short paragraph. In this paragraph Caelius quotes Apollonius of Memphis as separating two forms of dropsy, one marked by retention of fluid and the other by the inability to retain fluid; the patient discharges whatever he drinks as if it were passed through a pipe. Apollonius lived in the second half of the third century B.C. Caelius Aurelianus continues by stating that Demetrius of Apamea distinguishes this disease from dropsy in which any fluid that is drunk is discharged as urine. Demetrius calls this condition diabetes. The time of Demetrius of Apamea is given as the first century B.C. None of his works have come down to us; we have only quotations in later authors. Caelius Aurelianus apparently assigned a special chapter for the discussion of diabetes but this chapter seems to have been lost. I have looked for it in the 1529 edition edited by Johnnes Sichart without success. I have attempted to reconstruct this passage on diabetes from later authors noted for their ability to copy, but have not been able to find it. The early printers discarded the manuscripts after their publications were printed; therefore it is unlikely that this missing section will be found. The chief fact is that the concept of diabetes goes back to Demetrius, who lived in the first century B.C.
In his classic description of diabetes, Aretaeus of Cappadocia (fl.
early 2nd century CE) noted the excessive amount of urine that passed
through the kidney. He also noted its rarity ("Diabetes is a wonderful
affection, not very frequent among men..."). He described the disease as
"a melting down of the flesh and limbs into urine" and attributed it to
the bladder and kidneys, commenting that "life (with diabetes) is
short, disgusting and painful."
Aretaeus's contemporary Galen
(129-200 CE) stressed that diabetes was a disease of the kidneys and
affirmed its rarity, having observed it "only twice" at the time he
wrote On the affected parts.
Aretaeus and the others authors under discussion did not differentiate between diabetes mellitus and diabetes insipidus.
It is assumed that they were referring to diabetes mellitus, although
Swedish physician F. Henschen has suggested that Aretaeus and Galen may
have instead been referring to diabetes insipidus. For all practical purposes, however, diabetes insipidus remained unrecognized well into the 17th century.
Roman writers
Aulus Cornelius Celsus (fl.
30 BCE-50 CE), who interpreted Greek works in Latin, provided an early
clinical description of diabetes in his eight-volume work titled De Medicina.
He wrote that "urine exceeds in quantity the fluid taken even if it is
passed painlessly." This concept of an imbalance between the ingested
and excreted amounts of fluid was repeated by many authors into the Middle Ages.
Rufus of Ephesus (fl.
98-117 CE), a physician famous for his work on the variations of the
pulse, described the symptoms of diabetes as "incessant thirst" and
immediate urination after drinking, which he called "urinary diarrhea".
Byzantine writers
The Byzantine Empire was a continuation of the Roman Empire in its eastern provinces after the Fall of the Western Roman Empire. The capital was Constantinople (modern Istanbul, former Byzantium). It was conquered by the Ottomans in 1453.
Physician Oribasius (c. 320-403), personal physician of the emperor and philosopher Julian, compiled all known ancient medical texts of his time by theme into medical encyclopedia. He quotes Galen and Rufus on diabetes, considering it to be a polyuric
disease of the kidneys. Various descriptive names are given for the
condition, including: chamber-pot dropsy, diarrhea of the urine
(diarrhea urinosa), and the thirsty disease.
These descriptions, along with a number of other names for the
condition ("liuria", "extreme thirst or dipsacus"), were echoed by later
Byzantine writers in key encyclopedic texts.
Medieval Islamic world
During the Islamic Golden Age under the Abbasid Caliphate,
prominent Muslim physicians preserved, systematized and developed
ancient medical knowledge from across the Eurasian continent. They
synthesized concepts from classical antiquity (see: Ancient Greece, Ancient Rome), Persia, Ayurveda, and China. This work laid the foundations for later advances in medieval European medicine as European physicians came into contact with Islamic authors through the Renaissance of the 12th century.
Rhazes
(c. 854-925), or Muhammad ibn Zakariya al-Razi, included writings about
diabetes in the more than 230 books he produced in his lifetime.
Avicenna
(980–1037), or Ibn Sina, was a court physician to the caliphs of
Baghdad and a key figure in medicine who compiled an exhaustive medical
encyclopedia titled The Canon of Medicine. His account detailed the clinical features of diabetes, and termed the disease albulab ("water wheel") and zalkh el kuliah ("diarrhea of the kidneys"). He documented "the abnormal appetite and the collapse of sexual functions" and the sweet taste of diabetic urine, and further differentiated diabetes associated with emaciation from other causes of polyuria. He also elaborated on diabetic gangrene and treated diabetes using a mixture of lupine, trigonella (fenugreek), and zedoary seed. The treatment, prescribed at the recommendation of the French director of Tunis, was reportedly effective in 5 cases.
It has been noted that references to diabetes expanded in the medical texts of this period.
Eknoyan and Nagy (2005) speculate that this indicates the increasing
prevalence of the disease. Other interpretations are also possible,
including that the increasing references are the result of more
systematic knowledge sharing practices.
Maimonides
(c. 1135-1204), a renowned philosopher and polymath of the era in both
the Jewish and Islamic worlds, claimed to have seen more than 20 cases
(in contrast to Galen's two cases).
Abd al-Latif al-Baghdadi (1162-1231), also a philosopher and polymath, produced a treatise dedicated to diabetes (On Diabetes, Fols. 140v-149r).
Modern Europe
In the 16th century, Paracelsus (1493-1541) described diabetes as a constitutional disease
that "irritates the kidneys" and provokes excessive urination. He
reported that evaporating urine from a diabetic patient left an
excessive residue, which he called "salts". It has, however, been noted that he advised tasting the urine for sweetness in other contexts.
In 1674, Thomas Willis made reference to the sweet taste of diabetic urine in Pharmaceutice rationalis.
While this reiterated ancient observations from across the Eurasian
continent, it is generally understood to be the first explicit reference
to sugary diabetic fluids in the modern European context. However,
contrary to some claims that the term mellitus was added by Thomas Willis to specify the condition by its glycosuria, the word appears nowhere in his chapter on diabetes. The verifiable statement that may be derived from relevant sources is that Willis elaborated on glycosuria
but did not distinguish between different types of diabetes. Notably,
Willis disagreed with the common idea that the disorder originated in
the kidneys ("Reins"), suggesting instead that it was a "Distemper of
the Blood than of the Reins [Kidneys]". He also noted the connection
between the condition and certain dietary habits, "chiefly an assiduous
and immoderate drinking of Cider, Beer, or sharp Wines".
The presence of sugar in the urine (glycosuria) and in the blood (hyperglycemia) was demonstrated through the work of a number of physicians in the late 18th century, including Robert Wyatt (1774) and Matthew Dobson (1776).
In 1769, William Cullen called attention to diabetic urine that was "insipid" in taste:
I myself, indeed, think I have met with one instance of diabetes in which the urine was perfectly insipid; and it would seem that a like observation had occurred to Dr. Martin Lister. I am persuaded, however, that such instances are very rare; and that the other is much more common and perhaps the almost universal occurrence. I judge therefore, that the presence of such a saccharine matter may be considered as the principal circumstance in idiopathic diabetes.
In 1788, Thomas Cawley published a case study in the London Medical Journal based on an autopsy
of a diabetic patient. He suggested a link between the pancreas and
diabetes after observing stones and signs of tissue damage in the
patient's pancreas. The significance of this discovery went unappreciated for another hundred years.
In 1794, Johann Peter Frank of the University of Pavia
found that his patients were characterized by "long continued
abnormally increased secretion of non-saccharine urine which is not
caused by a diseased condition of the kidneys". He introduced the term insipidus, derived from the Latin ("tasteless"). Frank is often credited as the first physician to describe clinical differences between diabetes mellitus and diabetes insipidus.
This claim, however, warrants further examination given prior instances
of comparable description (e.g. those by William Cullen). It has been
noted that 1792 seems to be the year when "unequivocal" diabetes
insipidus was first described in the medical literature.
One may observe the lingering ambiguity in the general notion of "diabetes", especially as it manifests very differently in diabetes mellitus and in diabetes insipidus. In 1843, William Prout aptly summarized the general notion of diabetes of the time as follows:
The term diabetes, implying simply an increased flow of urine, is applicable to any disease in which that symptom is present in a remarkable degree. This general use of the term, however, has caused a great deal of confusion; as a variety of diseases differing altogether in their nature, except in the accidental circumstances of being accompanied by diuresis, or a large flow of urine, have in consequence been confounded with one another. To prevent this confusion in future, I would recommend that the term be restricted to those affections in which the urine is saccharine. Hence I define Diabetes to be a disease in which a saccharine state of the urine is the characteristic symptom.
Pathophysiology
Pathophysiology refers to the physiological processes associated with a disease or injury. In the history of medicine, diseases became better understood as human anatomy became better understood. The development of autopsy in the 15th and 16th centuries was key to this learning. As anatomists detailed the complex structures of the human body,
they began to pay more attention to the pathological structures
associated with diseases, their causes and effects, and mechanisms of
progress. By the 18th century, many such pathologic observations were being published in textbooks and journals. This work lay important foundations for advances in medical treatment and intervention.
Historically, various notions of present-day "diabetes" have described some general mix of excessive urine (polyuria), excessive thirst (polydipsia), and weight loss.
Over the past few centuries, these symptoms have been linked to updated
understandings of how the disease works, and how it manifests
differently across cases. This section outlines these developments as various diabetic conditions have become better understood.
Diabetes mellitus
Today, the term "diabetes" most commonly refers to diabetes mellitus. Diabetes mellitus is itself an umbrella term for a number of different diseases involving problems processing sugars that have been consumed (glucose metabolism). Historically, this is the "diabetes" which has been associated with sugary urine (glycosuria).
Role of the pancreas
In 1683, a surgical experiment by Johann Conrad Brunner almost led to a medical breakthrough. He excised the pancreas of a neighbour's hunting dog, causing polyuria and polydipsia. Brunner very clearly described these classic symptoms in pancreatectomized dogs, but made no association with diabetes.
In 1788, Thomas Cawley published a case study in the London Medical Journal based on an autopsy of a diabetic patient. He observed stones and signs of tissue damage in the patient's pancreas, noting that the "right extremity of the pancreas was very hard, and appeared to be scirrhous."
Considering the idea that diabetes "be not a disease of the kidneys",
he suggested that "a cure may have been effected... provided the stomach
and organs subservient to digestion had retained their digestive
power".
In the decades that followed, Richard Bright (1831) and Von
Recklinhausen (1864) also reported gross changes in the pancreas of
diabetic patients. Claude Bernard demonstrated the function of pancreatic juice in digestion between 1849 and 1856, clarifying an important link in the pathophysiology of diabetes.
In 1889, Joseph von Mering and Oskar Minkowski
excised the pancreas of a dog, which soon developed the symptoms of
diabetes. According to some accounts, Minkowski was taught by his
supervisor, Bernhard Naunyn, to test for sugar in urine whenever he noticed polyuria.
According to some other accounts, a laboratory attendant pointed out
that only the urine of the pancreatectomized dogs attracted flies,
prompting the researchers to test for sugar. Ultimately, the pair tested
for sugar in the urine and confirmed the connection with diabetes
mellitus. This event is commonly credited as the formal discovery of a
role for the pancreas in diabetes.
While the researchers continued to work on obtaining a pancreatic
extract, they were unable to obtain the presumed anti-diabetic
substance.
In 1893, Edouard Hédon
in Montpellier conducted a pancreatectomy in two stages. In the first,
he took out almost all of the pancreas, cutting off the supply of
pancreatic juice entirely. He then left a small remnant of pancreas
grafted under the dog's skin. The dog did not become diabetic until the
remaining graft was also excised, leading Hédon to the conclusion that
the pancreas must have two functions: digestion via an external
secretion, and carbohydrate metabolism via some internal secretion that
was released directly into the bloodstream. J.J.R. MacLeod,
among the Toronto group that later isolated and purified insulin for
clinical use, cited this finding as the most convincing proof of an
internal secretion in his 1913 book, Diabetes: Its Pathological Physiology.
Also in 1893, Édouard Laguesse suggested that the islet cells of the pancreas, described as "little heaps of cells" by Paul Langerhans in 1869, might play a regulatory role in digestion. These cells were named Islets of Langerhans after the original discoverer. Soon after, it was established that the role of the pancreas in carbohydrate metabolism could be localized to the islets; Eugene Lindsay Opie (1901) confirmed this connection in relation to diabetes mellitus. In 1909, Belgian physician Jean de Mayer hypothesized that the islets secrete a substance that plays this metabolic role, and termed it "insulin", from the Latin insula ("island"). Sir Edward Albert Sharpey-Schafer independently proposed the same in 1916, not knowing at the time that de Meyer had made the same suggestion a few years prior.
The endocrine
role of the pancreas in metabolism, and indeed the existence of
insulin, was further clarified between 1921-1922 when a group of
researchers in Toronto, including Frederick Grant Banting, Charles Herbert Best, J.J.R. MacLeod, and James Collip, were able to isolate and purify the extract.
Types of diabetes mellitus
Between 1850 and 1875, French researchers Apollinaire Bouchardat and E. Lancereux
acknowledged a need for a classification. They distinguished between
those diabetics that were lean, had severe symptoms, poor outcomes, and pancreatic lesions at autopsy (diabetes maigre),
and those that were overweight, presented later in life with a milder
form of the disease and had a better prognosis if put on a low calorie
diet (diabetes gras). These descriptions are comparable to the two types identified by Ayurvedic physicians Sushruta and Charaka (400–500 CE), with one type being associated with youth and the other with being overweight.
Harold Percival Himsworth established a clearer distinction in 1936, differentiating two types of diabetes based on sensitivity to insulin (both injected and pancreatic). In 1950, R. D. Lawrence observed that some diabetics were deficient in insulin and that some were not. Philip Hugh-Jones,
while working in Jamaica in 1955, clarified Lawrence’s classification
and coined the terms "type 1" and "type 2" diabetes. He also noted a
rarer variety observed in insulin-resistant youth (whose condition could
not be placed into the two types). He called this third group "type J",
where J stood for Jamaica.
The terms type 1 and 2 were for some time forgotten. In 1976, they were revived and popularized by Andrew Cudworth after he discovered the link between type 1 diabetes and a specific genetic marker.
Diabetes insipidus
In 1794, Johann Peter Frank
gave a relatively clear description of diabetes insipidus, as a "long
continued abnormally increased secretion of non-saccharine urine which
is not caused by a diseased condition of the kidneys".
This remained the general state of knowledge for another century.
William Osler, in the first edition of his textbook (1892), summarized
the pathophysiology of the condition as follows: "The nature of the
disease is unknown. It is doubtless of nervous origin. The most
reasonable view is that it results from a vasomotor disturbance of the renal vessels... giving rise to continuous renal congestion."
In 1912, Alfred Eric Frank, then working on diabetes mellitus in the department of Oskar Minkowski in Breslau, reported a specific link to the pituitary gland upon observing a case of a man who had survived after shooting himself in the temple. Morris Simmonds
drew the same connection in 1913. Thereafter, numerous reports
documented cases of diabetes insipidus associated with pituitary
lesions, steadily accumulating evidence favouring the hypothesized
connection.
George Oliver and Edward Albert Schafer were among the first researchers to document its endocrine functions. In the first two decades of the 20th century, however, a number of conflicting reports on the diuretic versus anti-diuretic properties of the pituitary extract caused confusion in the field.
A general agreement was reached that some of the results that reported
diuresis was due to increased pressure and blood flow to the kidney, while the posterior pituitary extract had an antidiurectic effect. By the 1920s, accumulated findings defined diabetes insipidus as a disorder of the pituitary.
The main question now became whether the cause of diabetes insipidus lay in the pituitary gland or the hypothalamus, given their intimate connection. In 1920, Jean Camus and Gustave Roussy summarized a number of years of research, reporting that they had produced polyuria in dogs by puncturing the hypothalamus while leaving the pituitary intact.
These results were later replicated by many others. Over the next few
decades, various competing hypotheses arose as to where and how the
"posterior lobe hormones" were produced, transported, and stored.
Finally in 1954, Berta and Ernst Scharrer concluded that the hormones were produced by the nuclei of cells in the hypothalamus.
Types of diabetes insipidus
Since
about 1850 it had been known that diabetes insipidus might be a
hereditary disorder. In 1945, it was noted that vasopressin had no
effect on treating some patients with familial diabetes. Based on this
clue, it soon came to light that there exist two types of hereditary
diabetes insipidus. In 1947, the anti-diuretic hormone (ADH)-insensitive
variety was termed nephrogenic diabetes insipidus (NDI), and attributed to a defect in the loop of Henle and the distal convoluted tubule. Since then, acquired forms of NDI have also been identified and associated with a broad range of causes.
Gestational diabetes insipidus has also been identified as a rare variety of disease that manifests in the third trimester of pregnancy and the early postpartum period.
Treatment and Intervention
Diabetes mellitus
Dietary intervention
Remedies for diabetes before the mid-1800s often consisted of blends of ingredients, bleeding, and opium (which was still being mentioned by William Osler
in 1915). Another treatment that prevailed into the 20th century was to
provide the patient with extra nourishment to compensate for the loss
of nutrients to urine. Patients under this regimen were advised to eat
as much as possible; sometimes, to eat extra large quantities of sugar.
This was misguided advice that resulted in early deaths. Meanwhile,
greater success at controlling diabetes was found as physicians began to
notice that fasting, not overfeeding, seemed to improve the symptoms of
diabetes. Dietary restriction was reported successful by John Rollo
(1706) and by Apollinaire Bouchardat, who observed the disappearance of glycosuria
in his patients during the rationing while Paris was besieged by the
Germans in 1870. A variety of sugar-free, low-carbohydrate diets
(occasionally involving physical restraint of patients lacking
self-discipline) became increasingly popular.
Among others, Frederick Madison Allen's "starvation diet" was notoriously spartan, but was shown to extend life expectancy. Elizabeth Hughes Gossett, later among the first people to be treated with insulin, was among Allen's patients.
Pancreatic extracts before insulin
The
limit to early diabetes control was partly due to the common-sense
assumption that the stomach was wholly responsible for nutrient metabolism.
As physiologists came to better understand the metabolic role of other
organs, they began to hypothesize alternative causes for the disease.
Through accumulating evidence, it was established that the "cause" of
diabetes could be localized to the pancreas, then to its internal secretion.
These findings fueled attempts to treat diabetes in animals and humans
with direct extracts from the pancreas, by no less than 400 researchers
according to historian Michael Bliss.
In the early 1900s, Georg Ludwig Zuelzer
experimented extensively with pancreatic extracts. After initial tests
on rabbits, he injected his extracts (which he called "acomatol") on
humans to clear but inconsistent success and severe side-effects. He nonetheless took out an American patent on his yet-problematic extracts.
Unfortunately, Zuelzer was ultimately unable to purify the extract due
to difficulty obtaining pancreases, a lack of funding, and interruption
by World War I. Ernest Lyman Scott, studying at the University of Chicago between 1911–12, also obtained some promising results but was discouraged from continuing.
In 1913, John James Rickard MacLeod, at the time several years into research in the area of carbohydrate metabolism and blood sugar behaviour, synthesized the state of research in Diabetes: Its Pathological Physiology.
He concluded that there was an internal secretion of the pancreas, but
suggested several reasons why it may never be captured in a pancreatic
extract. Between 1910 and 1920, techniques for measuring blood sugar (glucose test) were rapidly improved, allowing experiments to be conducted with greater efficiency and precision. These developments also helped establish the notion that high blood sugar levels (hyperglycemia), rather than glycosuria, was the important condition to be relieved.
Working at the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research between 1915-1919, Israel Kleiner reported convincing results on the effect of ground pancreas solutions on blood sugar levels, using rigorous experimental controls
which "theoretically... support[ed] the internal secretion hypothesis
of the origin of diabetes" and "practically... suggest[ed] a possible
therapeutic application." He discontinued this work upon leaving Rockefeller institute in 1919, for reasons not clearly known. Romanian scientist Nicolae Paulescu, another notable figure in the search for the anti-diabetic factor, began experimenting in 1916 using a slightly saline pancreatic solution like Kleiner's. After being interrupted by the Battle of Bucharest and the postwar turmoil, he published his first results in French in 1920 and 1921.
His extracts resulted in clear reduction of blood and urinary sugar in
the tested dogs, but had no immediate effect in his human patients
(through rectal injection)
that could not be duplicated by doses of saline alone. Paulescu took
out a Romanian patent on his solution (which he called "pancréine") and
method of production, but during the next year, made no further progress
with his work due to a lack of funding.
Insulin
In October 1920, Frederick Banting took interest in carbohydrate metabolism while preparing a talk he was to give his physiology students at Western University in London, Ontario. He encountered an article by Moses Barron which reported an autopsy of a patient whose pancreatic stone had obstructed the main pancreatic duct, but most of the islet cells had survived intact.
From this encounter, Banting had the idea to: "Ligate pancreatic ducts
of dog. Keep dogs alive till acini degenerate leaving Islets. Try to
isolate the internal secretion of these to relieve glycosurea [sic]"
On November 8, 1920, Banting met with J.J.R. Macleod, a senior professor of physiology at the University of Toronto,
to ask if he might mount a research project on the internal secretion
of the pancreas. Banting lacked experience in physiological research and
had superficial knowledge of the subject. Nonetheless, Macleod took
some interest and accepted Banting's request to work in his lab. On
account of what may have interested Macleod, Michael Bliss considers the following:
Speculation is in order here and is permissible because we have some idea of Macleod's knowledge of the literature. Whether he and Banting were discussing grafting or extracting, what must have appealed to Macleod as "never having been tried before" was the idea of somebody experimenting with degenerated or atrophied pancreas. Now there was nothing new in the idea of producing degeneration or atrophy of the acinar tissues by ligating the pancreatic ducts—all sorts of researchers had done this. Their interest, however, had been almost entirely in measuring the relative amounts of degeneration that took place in the various components of the pancreas, particularly the relative changes in the acinar and islet cells... Nobody had either tried to prepare a graft or administer an extract using a fully degenerated pancreas. And yet, theoretically, if there was an internal secretion, and if it did come from the islets of Langerhans, and if it was the acinar cells but not the islets that degenerated after the ducts were ligated, and if two or three other conditions held good, then perhaps some interesting results would follow. Even if the results were negative, it was the kind of experiment that ought to have been tried long ago, if only for completeness's sake.
Banting, Macleod, and student assistant Charles Best began the first experiment on May 17, 1921. On June 14, Macleod left for Scotland and advised remotely through the summer, returning on September 21. During this time, Banting and Best obtained mixed but encouraging results. Since they began with the hypothesis (months later falsified
through their own work) that it was necessary to avoid the external
secretion in order to obtain the internal secretion, they first used
degenerated pancreas, then used foetal pancreas obtained from
slaughterhouses.
Progress accelerated through December 1921 as it was clarified that
pancreatic extracts could be used without removing the external
(digestive) secretion.
As the group prepared for clinical trials, biochemist James B. Collip joined the team at Banting's request to help purify the extract for human injection. On January 23, 1922, Leonard Thompson was successfully treated with Collip's extract at Toronto General Hospital. Six more patients were treated by February 1922 and quickly experienced an improved standard of life. Other notable early recipients of insulin included Elizabeth Hughes, Constance Collier, James D. Havens, and Ted Ryder.
In April 1922, the Toronto group jointly authored a paper summarizing
all work thus far, and formally proposed to name the extract "insulin". In October 1923, Banting and Macleod were awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology based on a nomination by August Krogh for "the discovery of insulin and their exploration of its clinical and physiological characteristics". Banting and Macleod publicly shared the prize with Best and Collip, respectively.
A diabetes clinic was established at Toronto General Hospital that summer to increase capacity for treatment by Banting and collaborating physicians. The non-commercial Connaught Laboratories collaborated with researchers to scale production. Once limits were reached, Toronto contracted with Eli Lilly and Company beginning May 1922 with some caution regarding the commercial nature of the firm.
Nobel Prize Controversy
The 1923 Nobel Prize in Physiology awarded to Frederick Banting and J.J.R. Macleod—publicly shared with Charles Best and James Collip, respectively—sparked controversy as to who was due credit "for the discovery of insulin".
Early mass-reproduced accounts of the discovery often emphasized the
role of Banting and Best's work, sidelining Macleod and Collip's
contributions. This lopsided
narrative persisted due to limited availability of documentary evidence
and sustained differences in researchers' attitudes toward claiming
recognition. During their lifetime, Banting (d. 1941) and Best (d. 1978)
were more active—and in some ways, more obviously placed—than Macleod
(d. 1935) and Collip (d. 1965) in emphasizing their contributions to the
work.
However, the criteria advanced to prioritize the pair's early work
alone (before the extract was purified) would itself run into challenges
in the 1960s and 1970s as attention was drawn to successes in the same
year (Nicolae Paulescu) or earlier (George Ludwig Zuelzer, Israel Kleiner).
As tends to be true of any scientific line of inquiry, "the
discovery of a preparation of insulin that could be used in treatment"
was made possible through the joint effort of team members, and built
on the insight of researchers who came before them. In 1954, American
doctor Joseph H. Pratt, whose lifelong interest in diabetes and the
pancreas went back well before the Toronto discovery, published a
"reappraisal" of Macleod and Collip's contributions in refining Banting
and Best's flawed experiments and crude extract.
After Charles Best passed in 1978 and complete documentation (including
Banting's papers and Macleod's account of events) became available
through the Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library, historian Michael Bliss compiled a comprehensive account of the events surrounding the discovery of insulin.
Notably, Bliss's account reviews the nominations and Nobel Prize
committee's own investigations that culminated in the 1923 decision.
Metformin
In 1922, metformin was developed for the treatment of type 2 diabetes mellitus.
Further developments
Other notable discoveries since the early development of insulin and metformin include:
- Development of the long acting insulin NPH in the 1940s by Novo Nordisk
- Identification of the first of the sulfonylureas in 1942
- Reintroduction of the use of biguanides for Type 2 diabetes in the late 1950s. The initial phenformin was withdrawn worldwide (in the U.S. in 1977) due to its potential for sometimes fatal lactic acidosis and metformin was first marketed in France in 1979, but not until 1994 in the US.
- The determination of the amino acid sequence of insulin (by Sir Frederick Sanger, for which he received a Nobel Prize). Insulin was the first protein that the amino acid structure was determined.
- The radioimmunoassay for insulin, as discovered by Rosalyn Yalow and Solomon Berson (gaining Yalow the 1977 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine)
- The three-dimensional structure of insulin (PDB: 2INS)
- Dr Gerald Reaven's identification of the constellation of symptoms now called metabolic syndrome in 1988
- Demonstration that intensive glycemic control in type 1 diabetes reduces chronic side effects more as glucose levels approach 'normal' in a large longitudinal study, and also in type 2 diabetics in other large studies
- Identification of the first thiazolidinedione as an effective insulin sensitizer during the 1990s
In 1980, U.S. biotech company Genentech developed biosynthetic human
insulin. The insulin was isolated from genetically altered bacteria (the
bacteria contain the human gene for synthesizing synthetic human
insulin), which produce large quantities of insulin. The purified
insulin is distributed to pharmacies for use by diabetes patients.
Initially, this development was not regarded by the medical profession
as a clinically meaningful development. However, by 1996, the advent of
insulin analogues which had vastly improved absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion (ADME) characteristics which were clinically meaningful based on this early biotechnology development.
In 2005, a new drug to treat type 2 diabetes, derived from the Gila monster was approved by the Food and Drug Administration. The venom of the lizard contains exendin 4, which triggers one of the insulin-releasing pathways.
Diabetes insipidus
In 1913, researchers in Italy (A. Farini and B. Ceccaroni) and Germany (R. Von den Velden) reported the anti-diuretic effect of the substance extracted from the posterior lobe of the pituitary gland. The hormone responsible for this effect was later isolated and named vasopressin. Even while the pathophysiology
of diabetes insipidus was being further clarified, these findings made
possible a relatively simple and effective treatment such that
physicians could begin to control the disease. Various preparations of
the extract were produced and made commercially available by the pharmaceutical industry through the 20th century.
In 1928, Oliver Kamm and his colleagues posited two active principles in the pituitary extract: one with antidiuretic and pressor properties (vasopressin), and another with uterotonic properties (oxytocin). In a series of landmark achievements between 1947 and 1954 which culminated in a Nobel Prize in Chemistry (1955), Vincent du Vigneaud isolated, sequenced, and synthesized oxytocin and vasopressin. Today, synthesized and modified vasopressin is used to treat the condition.