糖尿及內分泌專科資訊

糖尿及內分泌專科資訊 提供關於糖尿病,高血壓,高血脂,三高,體重控制,脂肪肝,甲狀腺,腎上腺,腦下垂體疾病等資訊 理念:為大眾提供關於糖尿及內分泌疾病最準確的專科資訊,及提供有醫學實證的個人化治療

新年快樂!正所謂每逢佳節重三斤,過時過節、旅遊過後很多人都食出大肚腩!新一年重新出發,訂立目標,馬上健康!今日(2月27日)得到  #亞洲糖尿病基金會邀請,和大家分享「  #脂肪肪 可以逆轉嗎?」歡迎參加
27/02/2026

新年快樂!正所謂每逢佳節重三斤,過時過節、旅遊過後很多人都食出大肚腩!新一年重新出發,訂立目標,馬上健康!今日(2月27日)得到 #亞洲糖尿病基金會邀請,和大家分享「 #脂肪肪 可以逆轉嗎?」歡迎參加

【脂肪肝可以逆轉嗎?】講座

#賽馬會精準防控早發性糖尿病計劃 講座系列之「脂肪肝可以逆轉嗎?」邀請了內分泌及糖尿科專科醫生及香港中文大學醫學院内科及藥物治療學系名譽臨床助理教授 #胡依諾 醫生與你分享 #脂肪肝 可以怎樣逆轉。記得追蹤我們的Facebook或Instagram,以收到最新最快的消息啦!

日期:2026年02月27日 (星期五)
時間:下午1時15分 至 1時45分
形式:Facebook網上直播

立即報名👉🏻 https://www.facebook.com/share/1AKHvrBN9C/

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認識更多糖尿病資訊👉🏻 https://bit.ly/DiabetesRiskHK

#脂肪肝可以逆轉嗎 #賽馬會精準防控早發性糖尿病計劃 #香港賽馬會慈善信託基金 #香港中文大學醫學院 #香港中文大學香港糖尿病及肥胖症研究所 #聖雅各福群會 #亞洲糖尿病基金會 #正視糖尿病

10/02/2026

Statins, drugs commonly used to lower cholesterol, have been labeled everything from a “poison pill” to a Big Pharma scam on social media. Yet there are decades of science supporting their use in preventing heart disease and stroke risk. Here's what you need to know: https://on.natgeo.com/46wXQzZ

08/02/2026

The Boy Who Should Have Died — And the Injection That Changed Medicine Forever

Toronto General Hospital, January 1922.
A 14-year-old boy lay dying in a hospital bed.

His name was Leonard Thompson, and his body was slowly destroying itself.

He weighed 65 pounds.
His cheeks were hollow.
His ribs pressed visibly against thin, fragile skin.
His hair fell out in clumps.

The air around him smelled faintly of acetone — a sickly, sweet odor doctors recognized instantly. It meant one thing: his body had run out of fuel and had begun consuming itself to stay alive.

Leonard drifted in and out of consciousness, hovering at the edge of a diabetic coma.

Three years earlier, in 1919, Leonard had been diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes.

At the time, that diagnosis meant only one thing:

You will die.

When Medicine’s Only Answer Was Starvation

In 1919, there was no insulin. No treatment. No hope.

Doctors couldn’t stop diabetes — they could only slow it.

Their solution was something they grimly called “careful dietary regulation.”

In reality, it was starvation.

Leonard’s doctor restricted him to 450 calories a day — less than two small meals. Barely enough to keep a healthy child alive, let alone a boy fighting a catastrophic disease.

The logic was cruel but simple:
If sugar was killing him, he should eat as little as possible.

And for a while… it worked.

Not because Leonard was healing — but because his body was slowly wasting away instead of collapsing all at once.

Children with diabetes lived like ghosts under these starvation diets. Some lasted months. Some survived a year. Most didn’t.

Parents watched their children shrink.
They watched energy fade into weakness.
They watched life drain out of young bodies while doctors could only apologize.

By December 1921, Leonard Thompson was out of time.

A Father’s Impossible Choice

Leonard’s parents brought him to Toronto General Hospital, knowing what they would be told.

And they were told exactly what they feared.

Your son is dying.
There is nothing conventional medicine can do.

But then came a pause.

There was something else.

Something experimental.
Something dangerous.
Something that had never been tried on a human being.

Leonard’s father, Harry Thompson, listened as doctors explained it.

There was a young surgeon at the University of Toronto. His name was Frederick Banting.

He believed the pancreas produced a substance that controlled blood sugar — and that if it could be isolated, it might treat diabetes.

No one had ever proven it.
No one had ever injected it into a person.

Harry Thompson understood what this meant.

His son could die anyway.
Or his son could die sooner.

But there was a third possibility — one so unlikely it barely deserved hope.

Harry said yes.

The Crude Experiment That Shouldn’t Have Worked

Frederick Banting wasn’t a famous scientist. He wasn’t even particularly respected at first.

When he approached John Macleod, a senior professor at the University of Toronto, Macleod was skeptical.

Eventually, Macleod gave him:

A cramped laboratory

A handful of dogs

And a medical student assistant named Charles Best

That was it.

Through the summer of 1921, Banting and Best worked obsessively. They removed pancreases from dogs, induced diabetes, then injected them with crude pancreatic extracts.

And the dogs lived.

Blood sugar dropped.
Symptoms reversed.
Animals on the verge of death recovered.

Still, colleagues were doubtful. The extract looked like “thick brown muck.” Many believed it would never work in humans.

By January 1922, with biochemist James Collip refining the extract, they were ready.

Or as ready as desperation ever allows.

January 11, 1922 — The Injection That Failed

Leonard Thompson lay in bed as doctors prepared the syringe.

His father stood nearby, helpless.

The injection went in.

Nothing happened.

Leonard broke out in hives — an allergic reaction. His blood sugar barely moved. The extract was too impure.

The miracle did not come.

The room filled with a quiet, crushing disappointment.

They could have stopped there.
They could have declared the experiment too dangerous.
They could have written Leonard off as another tragic case.

Instead, they went back to the lab.

Twelve Days Against Death

For 12 days, James Collip worked almost without sleep.

He refined the alcohol extraction process.
Removed protein contaminants.
Concentrated the active substance.

While he worked, Leonard weakened.

His parents watched their son fade hour by hour, knowing this was likely his final stretch of life.

Then came January 23, 1922.

The Second Injection

The syringe went in.

This time, the change was unmistakable.

Leonard’s blood sugar plummeted to near normal levels.

The acetone smell on his breath faded.
His breathing steadied.
His eyes focused.

The medical chart recorded it simply:

“The boy became brighter, more active, looked better and said he felt stronger.”

But everyone in that room knew what they were witnessing.

A death sentence had been reversed.

The World Changes Overnight

Leonard received daily injections.

He gained weight.
His strength returned.
Color came back to his face.

By May 1922, he went home.

News spread around the world.

Parents flooded the University of Toronto with letters:

“My daughter is dying.”
“My son has weeks to live.”
“Please — can you send insulin?”

The demand was overwhelming. For a time, production even failed entirely.

It wasn’t until Eli Lilly partnered with the university later in 1922 that insulin could be produced at scale.

By 1923, insulin was being shipped across the world.

Children who would have died started living.

A Nobel Prize — And a Rare Act of Integrity

In October 1923, just 21 months after Leonard’s successful injection, the Nobel Prize in Medicine was awarded to Banting and Macleod — the fastest Nobel recognition in medical history.

Banting was furious that Best had been excluded. He shared his prize money with him immediately.

Macleod did the same with Collip.

They all understood the truth:

This breakthrough belonged to collaboration, persistence — and one dying boy.

Leonard’s Life, And His Legacy

Leonard Thompson lived 13 more years on insulin.

He grew up.
He lived a relatively normal life.
He reached adulthood — something that would have been impossible in 1919.

On April 20, 1935, Leonard died of pneumonia at age 27.

Without insulin, he would have died at 14.

Insulin gave him time.
Time to live.
Time his parents never thought they’d have.

Why Leonard Thompson Still Matters

Today, millions of people live full lives with Type 1 diabetes.

They use insulin pens.
Pumps.
Continuous glucose monitors.

They go to school.
Build careers.
Fall in love.
Have children.

Every single one of them owes their life to a boy who was willing to be first.

Leonard Thompson was the bridge between a world where diabetes meant death — and a world where it could be managed.

Not because of certainty.
But because of hope.

Because a father said yes when the alternative was burying his child.
Because scientists kept going after failure.
Because one boy took a risk that changed medicine forever.

Remember His Name

Leonard Thompson
1907–1935

The first human to receive insulin and live.

Because he went first — millions got to live.

如果想了解  #糖尿病  #肥胖症  #心腎代謝綜合症,可留意今日2:15pm 精靈一點
29/01/2026

如果想了解 #糖尿病 #肥胖症 #心腎代謝綜合症,可留意今日2:15pm 精靈一點

1300-1400 [健康人物專訪] 主題:走出哀傷 嘉賓:蘇瑞雯(註冊藝術(表達藝術)治療師、癌症復康者) 1400-1500 [醫學會會診日] 主題:心腎代謝綜合症 嘉賓:胡依諾醫生(內分泌及糖尿科專科醫生)

Nice to meet 新城CEO  @沈大師  #投資健康 有贏冇輸  #糖尿病  #蛋白尿  #驗血   就好似100天平均線
24/01/2026

Nice to meet 新城CEO

@沈大師
#投資健康 有贏冇輸
#糖尿病 #蛋白尿 #驗血 就好似100天平均線

23/01/2026

新城財經台呈獻2026年頭炮財經活動✨
立即登記《新城財經投資博覽2026》
👉🏻 https://bit.ly/4qkMK9l

第三場講座由林淑敏主持、星級財經專家沈振盈主講,2026送蛇迎馬,沈大師結合市況及堪輿角度同大家「赤馬紅羊論投資」!仲請嚟內分泌及糖尿科專科醫生胡依諾醫生即場同你講解健康話題,祝大家新一年做到投資健康,有贏無輸!

活動包括三場主題講座、投資諮詢攤位,現場更有免費糖尿測試!
參加講座更有機會獲得健康禮品包!免費入場,座位有限!

《新城財經投資博覽2026》
📍 日期:2026年1月24日 (星期六)
📍 時間:上午10:30 至 下午4:00
📍 地點:銅鑼灣富豪香港酒店3樓富豪金殿

指定贊助:中信證券輪證、華夏基金(香港)有限公司、南方東英資產管理、老虎證券、WCG MARKETS
參與機構:糖尿天使

#新城廣播 #新城財經台 #財經投資博覽

04/01/2026

【How to diagnose and treat one of the causes of diabetes : fatty liver - (2 CNE 學分) 🌟】
護協教育部將於1月16日舉辦有關講解糖尿病成因的講座👨‍🏫。

網上報讀課程或了解更多課程内容可點擊此連結 (會員請先登入後再報名)👉:https://nurse.org.hk/courses/HDTD160126

出席課程嘅合資格學員將於講座完結後獲得Contour Plus Elite Meter Set (Contour Plus Elite, Contour Plus Test Strips 50's, Microlet lancets 100's) - Value: $750 及由護協頒發嘅CNE證書 (2 CNE學分)🎓,有興趣參加講座嘅朋友,歡迎親臨護協4樓教育部櫃檯填寫及遞交表格或click我哋嘅網上報讀課程連結報名🤝

💬WhatsApp: 6084 7806
📞查詢: 2314 6911

#護協 #報讀課程 #糖尿病 #脂肪肝 #糖尿病治療 #健康管理

12/12/2025
就像理財需要長遠規劃和持續監察財務狀況, #慢性病的預防與治療 也需要定期留意身體指標,調整生活習慣和及早治療。很榮幸得到新城電台邀請,與肝臟及腸胃專科黃煒燊教授一起受訪,拆解  #糖尿病  #脂肪與  #慢性腎病 之間的「連鎖反應」!ht...
17/11/2025

就像理財需要長遠規劃和持續監察財務狀況, #慢性病的預防與治療 也需要定期留意身體指標,調整生活習慣和及早治療。

很榮幸得到新城電台邀請,與肝臟及腸胃專科黃煒燊教授一起受訪,拆解 #糖尿病 #脂肪與 #慢性腎病 之間的「連鎖反應」!

https://youtu.be/VBwkN4Uwwxs?si=aSXFQLdRDpbaCPDi

https://metro.hk/53534/健腎建富|糖尿病脂肪肝腎病危機?如何打破慢/

就像理財需要長遠規劃和持續監察財務狀況,慢性病的預防與治療也需要定期留意身體指標,調整生活習慣和及早治療。今集「健腎•建富」邀請到內分泌及糖尿科專科胡依諾醫生,以及肝臟及腸胃科專科黃煒燊教授,拆解糖尿...

誰是  #代謝性脂肪肝 高危一族? #中央肥胖 或體重過重(BMI超過23) #二型糖尿病 或空腹血糖偏高 #高血壓 #三酸甘油脂 偏高 #高密度膽固醇(好膽固醇)偏低肝臟脂肪含量長期過高,可能會引發  #脂肪性肝炎  #肝硬化,甚至  #...
13/11/2025

誰是 #代謝性脂肪肝 高危一族?

#中央肥胖 或體重過重(BMI超過23)
#二型糖尿病 或空腹血糖偏高
#高血壓
#三酸甘油脂 偏高
#高密度膽固醇(好膽固醇)偏低

肝臟脂肪含量長期過高,可能會引發 #脂肪性肝炎 #肝硬化,甚至 #腎衰竭,有機會威脅生命。肝臟功能都會影響到 #心腦血管 以及胰臟功能。研究顯示每四名 #糖尿病 人便有三名患有 #脂肪肝 甚至有1/5已經出現嚴重 #肝纖維化 或者肝硬化。

脂肪肝很難從外表判斷,甚至驗血或超聲波都不能量度肝的脂肪量和硬度,需要 #纖維化掃描 診斷肝臟情況。

想要改善脂肪肝,基本步是健康飲食運動和戒酒。2025年新英倫醫學期刊發表了大型臨床研究,於數百名脂肪性肝炎患者中 #腸泌素 治療成功緩解脂肪性肝炎比率達 63%,因此通過美國食物藥物管理局FDA批准,成為第一種註冊治療脂肪肝的腸泌素藥物。如果本身有 #三高 的患者,都需要同時注意肝臟狀態,建議諮詢 #內分泌及糖尿科專科醫生 如何改善肝臟健康。

https://www.fda.gov/drugs/news-events-human-drugs/fda-approves-treatment-serious-liver-disease-known-mash

香港每四人就有一人患有脂肪肝。TVB節目《流行都市》請來內分泌及糖尿科專科醫生胡依諾講解「代謝性脂肪肝」的五大風險因素,並分享改善脂肪肝的方法。

健康關注組 - 第 434 集 : 肥胖糖尿 搞壞全身什麼是  #糖胖心腎綜合症?很多疾病都因  #肥胖 而形成,肥胖是  #糖尿病 的主要成因之一、之後  #心血管疾病  #腎病 就會殺埋身。糖尿病同肥胖症可以說是  #萬病之源,會除了導...
10/11/2025

健康關注組 - 第 434 集 : 肥胖糖尿 搞壞全身

什麼是 #糖胖心腎綜合症?

很多疾病都因 #肥胖 而形成,肥胖是 #糖尿病 的主要成因之一、之後 #心血管疾病 #腎病 就會殺埋身。糖尿病同肥胖症可以說是 #萬病之源,會除了導致心血管與腎臟疾病,原來心與腎之間的問題,是緊緊相扣,傷心又傷腎,除了藥物治療,患者必須自律自救。

https://youtu.be/KFeSj1gDOC0

https://hoy.tv/title/23341

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