The level of blood glucose is abnormally high.
Cellular respiration is a process where animals breathe and get their oxygen from glucose.
Wikipedia has a good overall summery of what glucose levels are and how glucose works around your body. If you're looking for a simpler definition NHS choices explains why, how and what may cause high blood glucose levels and how it may be treated.
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The term Hexose is used in Organic Chemistry. Its definition is any of the class of simple sugars who's molecules contain 6 Carbon atoms. Such as glucose, or fructose.
Answer this question… C. The cellular process that releases energy by breaking down glucose when oxygen is not available
Glucose
Maltose, by definition, is a disaccharide made up of two molecules of glucose, so it cannot be a monosaccharide. Glucose itself, however, is a monosaccharide. Monosaccharides are the most basic units of carbohydrates and form the links in much larger chains of polysaccharides.
Glucose is a simple sugar that serves as the primary source of energy for living organisms. It is a vital component in the process of cellular respiration, where it is broken down to produce ATP, the main energy currency of the cell.
Its a process which generates ATP using substrate level phosphorylation. This process is anaerobic (does not need oxygen) and generates two net ATP per molecule of glucose
Answer this question… C. The cellular process that releases energy by breaking down glucose when oxygen is not available
No, glucose is a component of two dietary disaccharides: maltose (glucose + glucose) and lactose (glucose + galactose). Sucrose (glucose + fructose) does not contain glucose.