answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

Insulin

User Avatar

Wiki User

12y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: What causes glucose to be removed from blood?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Continue Learning about Biology

A decrease in blood glucose that causes the inhibition of insulin is an example of?

Hypoglycemia


Which organ adds or removes glucose from the blood as necessary?

The liver is the organ that produces and removed glucose from the blood. The liver also produces insulin that helps metabolize carbohydrates.


Negative feedback with increase in blood glucose?

negative feedback can increase the concentration of glucose in the blood stream. if the blood glucose levels are too low, alpha cells will produce glucagon which causes the liver to break glycogen down into glucose. it is then released into the blood stream which increase the blood glucose levels.if it is too high, the beta cells will produce insulin which causes the liver and muscle cells to form glycogen from glucose. In addition, other cells are encouraged to use glucose in cell respiration rather than fats.both the beta and alpha cells are produced from the pancreas.


What concentration of glucose causes glycosylation?

Hemoglobin is glycosylated at any concentration, even normal blood sugar levels. This is why there is a "normal" hemoglobin A1c range. The problem comes when there is an elevated blood glucose. The problem is with the elevated blood glucose, not that there is an elevated Hgb A1c. The A1c is only a marker and a way for physicians to measure the average blood glucose over the past 120 days.


How does the hormone regulates blood glucose levels?

The hormone that regulates blood glucose levels is insulin plus a second hormone, glucagon. Insulin lowers blood glucose levels and glucagon increases blood glucose levels. Insulin actually carries the glucose molecule across the cell membrane. That is how it actually lowers the glucose molecules in the blood. Glucagon causes the liver, which stores glycogen, to convert it to glucose which is released in the blood. These two hormones form a feedback mechanism which keeps glucose stable.

Related questions

How glucose is removed from blood?

kidneysInsulin causes glucose to be removed from the blood and stored. Insulin is a hormone that is produced by the pancreas.


What hormone removes glucose from the blood and stores it in the liver?

GlucagonINSULIN causes glucose to be removed from the blood stream by having it stored in the form of Glycogen in muscle and liver cellsGLUCAGON causes glycogen to be broken down from liver and muscle tissue and releases glucose into the blood stream, thus increasing circulating blood glucose levels. The hormone, released by the pancreas, is insulin.


What does the liver removed from the blood?

amino acids and glucose A+


A decrease in blood glucose that causes the inhibition of insulin is an example of?

Hypoglycemia


Which organ adds or removes glucose from the blood as necessary?

The liver is the organ that produces and removed glucose from the blood. The liver also produces insulin that helps metabolize carbohydrates.


Insulin causes a a decrease in the concentration of blood glucose b an increase in the concentration of blood glucose?

A. A decrease in glucose. Unless your body is as strange as mine. I'm trying to figure out why my glucose increases when I increase my insulin.


Insulin secretion is stimulated by blood glucose concentrations?

Yes. Rising glucose levels causes insulin to be secreted.


What is the hormone that causes a decrease in blood glucose?

Insulin is released by the pancreas and enters the blood, delivering glucose into cells for use (therefore lowering your blood glucose level). In some cases, like in a person with diabetes, glucagon is released and lowers blood glucose levels.


What hormone causes liver cells to release glucose?

The hormone glucagon stimulates the liver to release glucose into the blood when glucose levels are low.


Negative feedback with increase in blood glucose?

negative feedback can increase the concentration of glucose in the blood stream. if the blood glucose levels are too low, alpha cells will produce glucagon which causes the liver to break glycogen down into glucose. it is then released into the blood stream which increase the blood glucose levels.if it is too high, the beta cells will produce insulin which causes the liver and muscle cells to form glycogen from glucose. In addition, other cells are encouraged to use glucose in cell respiration rather than fats.both the beta and alpha cells are produced from the pancreas.


What causes excessive thirst high blood glucose levels acidosis?

insulin


What hormone produced in inadequate amounts causes excessive diuresis without high blood glucose levels?

Excessive diuresis withou high blood glucose levels