New Delhi, January 10 (IANS). The day of 11 January 1922 is considered a milestone in the history of medical science. On this day, for the first time in Canada, a diabetic patient was successfully injected with insulin, opening the way to controlling a disease that at that time was considered synonymous with almost certain death. This experiment was not only successful in saving the life of a patient, but also became a ray of hope for crores of people.
At the center of this historic achievement was 14-year-old Leonard Thompson, who suffered from Type 1 diabetes. There was no effective treatment for diabetes at that time. Patients were kept on very strict diets, due to which they gradually became weak and malnourished. Doctors had no concrete way to prevent or control the disease. In such a situation, Leonard Thompson’s condition was also deteriorating rapidly and his hope of life was almost gone.
At the same time, at the University of Toronto, Canada, Dr. Frederick Banting and his colleagues Charles Best, James Callip and John MacLeod were working on a hormone that was extracted from the pancreas. This hormone was later named ‘insulin’. After many unsuccessful experiments and technical difficulties, scientists succeeded in preparing insulin in a pure form.
On January 11, 1922, Leonard Thompson was given the first dose of insulin. The initial results weren’t exactly ideal, but within a few days the improved insulin worked wonders. The patient’s blood sugar levels came under control, his condition rapidly improved, and he came back from the brink of death. This moment became a turning point in medical history.
Following this success, insulin production began on a large scale and it soon became the basis of diabetes treatment throughout the world. A disease that was once considered incurable now became a manageable condition. Millions of patients have the opportunity to live a normal, active and long life.
This event of January 11, 1922 was not just the success of a scientific experiment, but it was a victory of human curiosity, research and compassion. Even today this day is considered a symbol of hope, innovation and survival in medical science.
–IANS
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