Abstract

Sugar, or technically known as glucose, is the main source of energy of all cells in the human body. The glucose homeostasis cycle is the mechanism to maintain blood glucose levels in a healthy threshold. When this natural mechanism is broken, many metabolic disorders appear such as diabetes mellitus, and some substances of interest, like glucose, are out of control. In the mechanism to maintain blood glucose, several organs are involved but the role of most of them has been disregarded in the literature. In this chapter, the main organs involved in such a mechanism and their role in glucose metabolism are described. Specifically, the stomach and small intestine, organs of the gastrointestinal system, are the first to play an important role in the regulatory system, because it is where carbohydrates are digested and absorbed as glucose into the bloodstream. Then glucose as a simple substance goes to the liver to be stored as glycogen. Glucose storage occurs due to the delivery of hormones from the pancreas, which produces, stores, and releases insulin and glucagon, two antagonistic hormones with an important role in glucose metabolism. The kidneys assist the liver in insulin clearance in the postprandial state and gluconeogenesis in the post absorptive state. Physiological aspects and the detailed role of every organ involved in glucose metabolism are described in this chapter.

Highlights

  • Carbohydrates are more abundant in the diet, they are digested to be converted into glucose molecules to be absorbed in the gut

  • Diabetes Mellitus is a condition appearing when the glucose homeostasis is broken, that is, plasma glucose levels are no longer maintained at desired levels

  • Venous irrigation comes from the portal system, provides the 75% of the blood supply, and carries blood rich in nutrients that were absorbed from the small intestine through enterocytes and hormones that were released by the pancreas

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Summary

Introduction

Glucose is contained in foods rich in carbohydrates like bread, potatoes, rice, and fruits. To be absorbed, stomach and small intestine play an important role in digestion every particle ingested. Once the glucose molecules are absorbed into the bloodstream, they reach the liver by traveling through the portal system In the liver, they are partially stored as glycogen by the action of the insulin previously released in the pancreas. Sugar Intake - Risks and Benefits and the Global Diabetes Epidemic concentrations released by the pancreas are usually higher than glucose concentrations in blood. In this sense, the kidneys regulate glucose and insulin concentrations once these molecules reach them.

Importance of glucose in the human body
The glucose regulation cycle
Main organs involved in glucose homeostasis
Pancreas
Kidneys
Gastrointestinal tract
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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