Glycogen and stored in muscles and liver. Insulin converts glycogen into glucose when it is needed.
Excess glucose is stored in animals as glycogen in the liver and muscles. Glycogen storage is limited in the body, and remain carbohydrates will be stored as fat.
In animals excess sugar is stored as glycogen, in plants it is stored as starch...
Animals cannot store much glucose. Surplus energy would be stored as glycogen and then fat.
adipose tissue, fat, or glycogen
fat
Nothing happens to the glucose. It should have been stored in the kidney, but it didn't, therefore, you have an excess amount glucose in your blood. Hence, the insulin shots.
Glucose is generally not excreted from the body, it can be stored as gyclogen, latter broken down for energy. In which glucose is broken down into pyruvate then into glycolosis for processing Excess glucose can be in the urine if you are diabetic. Glucose can be stored in your liver and in your muscles in the form of glycogen and then released as the cells need glucose for respiration. Glycolysis is the process whereby glucose is cut into two molecules of pyruvate. If oxygen is present, pyruvate will enter the mitochondria and chemical bonds in pyruate will be broken to release energy that will be stored in ATP
how Diabetic Ketoacidosis evolves and how the body compensates for the acid
In the human body, glucose is stored in the cells. The function of the stored glucose is the secondary energy storage. The primary energy is stored in the adipose tissue.
Sugar=glucose
Glucose is stored in the muscle and liver cells as glycogen. Glycogen is insoluble, unlike glucose. This means it won't affect the osmotic potential of the cells.
It is stored as GLYCOGEN, not glucose.
Most animals store glucose as glycogen in liver and muscles .
Glucose is stored in the body as glycogen. Excess glucose in circulation is normally polymerized within the liver and muscles as glycogen, which is hydrolyzed to glucose as needed.
They are converted to glucose. Excess is stored as fat.
glucose is converted into a sugar called sucrose Excess glucose is stored as glycogen in your muscles and liver. It is released as needed between meals.
It is stored in the liver as glycogen. It is converted into glycogen by insulin.
The human body stores excess glucose as glycogen. The storage areas for glycogen are limited, therefore any carbohydrates that are consumed beyond that capacity is stored as fat, of which the body can store an unlimited amount.
Carbohydrates in any form, (simple or complex) are eventually turned into Glucose. Glucose is a simple sugar. If you do not utilize all of the Glucose stored in your body, it will become fat. This will be stored in your fat cells.
The body uses glucose as energy. Excess glucose is stored as fat (in animals) and as starch (in plants).
during synthesis, ATP, excess get's stored as glucose. glucose store as starch
Starch. Plants use the excess glucose to form starch molecules