That can be overcome, AI will come into its own for this kind of application in the very near future, my company has been working with AI for the last 10 years, whilst not in a medical field if pushed we could develop something that learns an individual’s habits, how they use their medication and their lifestyle habits and make sure their insulin is balanced in their system.I have a friend who has a diy loop.
She loves it and her DexComm graphs are amazing.
She eats a low carb diet.
I am less convinced as she still has to pre-bolus for food (mostly protein because of her low carb) and manually reduce her basal when exercising.
I believe the limitation is the speed of manufactured insulin compared to the speed of the stuff that a heathy pancreas can create.
And their speed, and the speed of the insulin. If you're using an insulin where you'd normally prebolus 15 minutes before eating, an automated system isn't going to be able to match that without help since a CGM's not going to see much until half an hour (or more) after you'd have prebolused. Similarly for exercise.It’s difficult because at the end of the day, it all depends on the accuracy of sensors,
While I do respect your view point it seems a little pessimistic, without people pushing boundaries of what is possible we’d be still injecting pig insulin. The current Covid vaccines are a case in point, the common cold, a virus remains incurable yet within 9 months we have a vaccine on the market which used completely different technology to all the previous efforts at controlling viruses basically by injecting a small amount of the virus you are trying to control and then praying the persons own immune system takes over and protects themOpenAPS is just a community of developers aiming to produce a system mimicking an artificial pancreas, presumably by writing additional algorithms to sit on top of an existing loop system which sends alerts for highs, and switches off insulin for lows. It’s free, and open access allowing other nerds to fettle it.
The reasons why this is an exercise in futility are manifold. The companies that make pump loop systems, with their vast resources and experienced developers are all aiming for such a system. I don’t imagine it’s easy, which is why such a system doesn’t yet exist. It will soon, because it’s the next logical development in pump design - the complete artificial pancreas.
Secondly, such a system will have to be clinically tested to gain CE accreditation, so any system developed by OpenAPS will have to do the same. That costs money.
Finally, as Inka points out, they have been trying this for some years. It’s difficult because at the end of the day, it all depends on the accuracy of sensors, and as CGM users know, the current generation of sensors isn’t accurate enough with very high or very low scenarios, and that will persist whatever fancy system you add on top of that. And you can’t do that without venous sampling, so you need an implanted venous blood sensor. Such things do exist, in ICU units, but it does involve skilled medical input, and does have risks.
So all that considered, I don’t think we wIll ever have a hands off artificial pancreas, because in truth it isn’t worth all the bother. We’ll never escape BG testing.
We’ve had nearly a century of people with diabetes surviving a full life using insulin injections. It’s hardly an intolerable burden. CGM and pumps make life easier, but never free from some attention. If you think that is an intolerable burden, you need to change your mindset, because the alternative is a messy death, as it always has been.
Yes, it feels like even if the CGM delay (and slowish insulins) can't be improved much, we could plausibly end up with systems with two buttons: one to press before eating something significant and one to press before exercising significantly, with the system handling the details.@helli I’ve seen a looping friend’s graphs too and they’re incredible. I could see how the algorithm pushed down their blood sugar after a pizza and how it constantly adjusted itself. Absolutely brilliant!