First, understand that a hormone is a type of enzyme. Insulin and glucagon are the two hormones in the pancreas.
If you have too much glucose in your blood (i.e. eating a lot of carbohydrates like pasta, bread, fruits, milk, cake, and so on) then the hormone insulin will come out. Insulin decreases blood glucose.
If you have to little glucose in your blood (i.e. exercising for a while without eating carbohydrates, not eating for days, etc.) then the hormone glucagon will come out. Glucagon increases the supply of glucose in your blood.
HELLP syndrome is a condition during pregnancy that includes elevated liver enzymes.
The pancreas secretes digestive enzymes along with the enzymes insulin and glucagon.
Kidney issues can cause elevated enzymes. When your kidneys are damaged, your body responds with elevated levels of naturally occurring enzymes.
No, dehydration cannot cause elevated liver enzymes. Vitamin deficiency and damage to liver can cause the enzymes of the liver to be elevated.
In pancreatitis, these enzymes become prematurely activated and actually begin their digestive functions within the pancreas. The pancreas, in essence, begins to digest itself.
The pancreas releases its enzymes into the duodenum, which is the first part of the small intestine.
Food is not digested in the pancreas. In fact, food doesn't pass through the pancreas at all. The pancreas secretes digestive enzymes to the small intestine (duodenum).
The organ that produces and secretes enzymes that are essential for proper digestion is the pancreas. The enzymes that the pancreas produces and secretes are trypsinogen, , chymotrypsinogen, pancreatic lipase and amylase.
No digestion actually happens in the pancreas, but the pancreas does secret enzymes that help break down carbohydrates, proteins, and fats into the digestive system.
Pancreas
The pancreas produces enzymes and insulin.
The pancreas is a source of several enzymes