First use of insulin in treatment of diabetes on this day in 1922

Authored by diabetes.org.uk and submitted by shrimpcocktails

On 11 January 1922 insulin was first used in the treatment of diabetes.

Insulin was discovered by Sir Frederick G Banting (pictured), Charles H Best and JJR Macleod at the University of Toronto in 1921 and it was subsequently purified by James B Collip.

Before 1921, it was exceptional for people with Type 1 diabetes to live more than a year or two. One of the twentieth century’s greatest medical discoveries, it remains the only effective treatment for people with Type 1 diabetes today.

Find out more about insulin in the treatment of diabetes.

On 11 January 1922, Leonard Thompson, a 14-year-old boy with diabetes, who lay dying at the Toronto General Hospital, was given the first injection of insulin. However, the extract was so impure that Thompson suffered a severe allergic reaction, and further injections were cancelled.

Over the next 12 days, James Collip worked day and night to improve the ox-pancreas extract, and a second dose was injected on the 23 January. This was completely successful, not only in having no obvious side-effects, but in completely eliminating the glycosuria sign of diabetes.

Children dying from diabetic ketoacidosis were kept in large wards, often with 50 or more patients in a ward, mostly comatose. Grieving family members were often in attendance, awaiting the (until then, inevitable) death.

In one of medicine's more dramatic moments Banting, Best, and Collip went from bed to bed, injecting an entire ward with the new purified extract. Before they had reached the last dying child, the first few were awakening from their coma, to the joyous exclamations of their families.

MrsVinchenzo130 on February 4th, 2018 at 02:49 UTC »

Can't imagine being one of those moms holding your dying baby's hand and a doctor injects life back into them. What a wonderful day that must have been.

acinohio on February 4th, 2018 at 02:37 UTC »

As a type 1 for 28 years I thank these people every time I take a shot. 6 times a day...

Gemmabeta on February 4th, 2018 at 00:31 UTC »

A side note on the discovery of insulin, Frederick Banting was given his pick of two medical students as assistants and the two, Charles Best and Clark Noble, flipped a coin on who will work with Banting. Charles Best won the coin flip and went on to discover insulin and get rich and famous--Noble lost and went on to...not get rich and famous.

About 20 years later, Clark Noble was doing research and was sent a packet of leaves from Jamaica that was said to have interesting medicinal properties. As Noble did not have the resources to work on it, he passed the leaves to his brother Robert, who went on to discover vinca alkaloids from the leaves, one of the most important cancer chemo agents. Robert went on to get rich and famous.

Clark Noble died in 1978 as a footnote in Canadian history, his obiturary was literally titled "Almost Famous".