Читать книгу Unveiling Diabetes - Historical Milestones in Diabetology - Группа авторов - Страница 7
ОглавлениеJörgens V, Porta M (eds): Unveiling Diabetes - Historical Milestones in Diabetology. Front Diabetes. Basel, Karger, 2020, vol 29, pp VII–VII (DOI: 10.1159/000506564)
This book is not written by professional historians and it does not pretend to cover all aspects of the subject. We asked friends and colleagues to contribute a chapter – several of them are Honorary Members of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes. Some of the authors personally contributed important discoveries which represent milestones in the history of diabetes research. We are particularly proud to include a chapter authored by a Lady of the British Empire who made major contributions to the prevention of blindness in diabetic eye disease, and of a diabetologist who was knighted for his work for people with diabetes. We thank heartfully all authors for their time and effort and the team at Karger Publishers for their continuous support.
We hope you will enjoy reading this book and that you will find useful information about previously neglected or unknown aspects of the history of diabetes research. We hope as well that the book may contribute to the correction of some myths in the history of diabetes research.
The history of diabetes research is not only the story of great discoveries, it is also the story of mistakes, missed opportunities, and authorities that obstructed progress. An example is the determination of HbA1c – it took almost 2 decades from its discovery in Teheran until clinical diabetologists introduced it into clinical medicine. Another example is patient education aiming at self-treatment. It was underestimated for half a century – for decades opinion leaders in diabetology strictly opposed the idea that people can be trained to adjust their insulin dosage themselves based upon the results of self-monitoring.
The most important advances in diabetes research to date have been the discovery of pancreatic diabetes by Oskar Minkowski and Josef von Mering in 1889 and – even more important for people with diabetes – the first successful clinical use of life-saving insulin in Toronto in 1922. Many diabetologists worldwide will be obliged to give speeches and write articles about the history of diabetes research to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the discovery of insulin in 2022. We hope that they will find inspiration in this book.
Viktor Jörgens, Düsseldorf, Germany
Massimo Porta, Turin, Italy