Glucose is the kind of sugar that circulates in the blood.
For example, lactose (sugar found in milk), is a disaccharide (ie two linked sugar molecules) made up of one glucose molecule and one galactose molecule. Galactose is almost like glucose, but it will be changed into glucose in the liver and then released into the blood. All carbohydrates, including starches and grains, eventually get broken down and converted into glucose molecules, which are then released into the blood.
Correct, glucose is a blood sugar.
Blood sugar isn't really sugar, but a measure of the amount of glucose bound into a person's blood cells. We use glucose for "fuel" essentially, to power various cellular processes.
Blood sugar is a measure of the glucose or amount of glucose present in a person's blood.
Another name for Glucose is Dextrose
No, blood sugars are called Glucose and Sucrose is just plain table sugar.
A blood glucose test measures the amount of a sugar called glucose in a sample of your blood.
Diabetes can also been called as diabetes mellitus, high blood sugar, high blood glucose, hyper glucose and hyper sugar.
Glucose is called blood sugar.
Sugar is energy ( to be simple ) . Our body needs energy to do any work . The energy is stored in the form of carbohydrates . So naturally there is a certain level of sugar otherwise called glucose present on the blood. When excess glucose is present the condition is called diabetes !
Glucose
When the blood sugar is very high in the body, the pancreas makes a hormone called 'insulin' this hormone tells the liver to take the excess glucose out of the blood. The glucose is stored as glycogen, a type of sugar, in the liver. The glucose in the blood falls to its correct level. Also when we excercise, the muscles in our body use up a lot of glucose. If blood glucose falls, the pancrease makes another hormone 'glucagon'. This tells the liver to convert some glycogen into glucose and put it back into the blood. Glucose in the blood rises to its correct level.
One synonym for glucose is blood sugar.