Artificial Pancreas Technology Offers Hope for Childhood Diabetes.
Melissa J SchoelwerMark D DeBoerPublished in: Current nutrition reports (2021)
The use of hybrid closed-loop devices in children and adolescents with T1D consistently increases time in the target glucose range (70-180 mg/dL) without increasing the risk of hypoglycemia. Although hybrid closed-loop systems are able to maintain fairly tight glycemic control overnight, daytime control remains challenging, primarily due to meals and exercise, and careful carbohydrate counting and meal boluses remain essential components of optimal diabetes control. Bihormonal and fully automated AP systems remain investigational at this time. While commercially available hybrid closed-loop AP systems improve glycemic control in children with T1D, more work is needed to achieve a fully automated AP system and decrease the burden of using diabetes technology.
Keyphrases
- glycemic control
- type diabetes
- blood glucose
- transcription factor
- weight loss
- machine learning
- insulin resistance
- deep learning
- high throughput
- obstructive sleep apnea
- physical activity
- high intensity
- blood brain barrier
- clinical trial
- blood pressure
- randomized controlled trial
- risk factors
- body composition
- skeletal muscle