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book The Living World 8th Edition by George Johnson cover

The Living World 8th Edition by George Johnson

النسخة 8الرقم المعياري الدولي: 978-0078024214
book The Living World 8th Edition by George Johnson cover

The Living World 8th Edition by George Johnson

النسخة 8الرقم المعياري الدولي: 978-0078024214
تمرين 18
Why Do Diabetics Excrete Glucose in Their Urine?
Late-onset diabetes is a serious and increasingly common disorder in which the body's cells lose their ability to respond to insulin, a hormone that is needed to trigger their uptake of glucose. As illustrated below, the binding of insulin to a receptor in the plasma membrane causes the rapid insertion of glucose transporter channels into the plasma membrane, allowing the cell to take up glucose. In diabetics, however, glucose molecules accumulate in the blood while the body's cells starve for the lack of them. In mild cases, blood glucose levels rise to several times the normal value of 4 m M; in severe, untreated cases, blood glucose levels may become enormously elevated, up tO25 times the normal value. A characteristic symptom of even mild diabetes is the excretion of large amounts of glucose in the urine. The name of the disorder, diabetes mellitus , means "excessive secretion of sweet urine." in normal individuals, by contrast, only trace amounts of glucose are excreted. The kidney very efficiently reabsorbs glucose molecules from the fluid passing through it. Why doesn't it do so in diabetic individuals?
The graph on the upper right displays so-called glucose tolerance curves for a normal person ( blue line ) and a diabetic ( red line ). After a night without food, each individual drank a test dose of 100 grams of glucose dissolved in water. Blood glucose levels were then monitored at 30-minute and one-hour intervals. The dotted line indicates the kidney threshold, the maximum concentration of blood glucose molecules (about 10 m M ) that the kidney is able to retrieve from the fluid passing through it when all of its glucose-transporting channels are being utilized full bore. Why Do Diabetics Excrete Glucose in Their Urine?  Late-onset diabetes is a serious and increasingly common disorder in which the body's cells lose their ability to respond to insulin, a hormone that is needed to trigger their uptake of glucose. As illustrated below, the binding of insulin to a receptor in the plasma membrane causes the rapid insertion of glucose transporter channels into the plasma membrane, allowing the cell to take up glucose. In diabetics, however, glucose molecules accumulate in the blood while the body's cells starve for the lack of them. In mild cases, blood glucose levels rise to several times the normal value of 4 m M; in severe, untreated cases, blood glucose levels may become enormously elevated, up tO<sub>2</sub>5 times the normal value. A characteristic symptom of even mild diabetes is the excretion of large amounts of glucose in the urine. The name of the disorder, diabetes mellitus , means excessive secretion of sweet urine. in normal individuals, by contrast, only trace amounts of glucose are excreted. The kidney very efficiently reabsorbs glucose molecules from the fluid passing through it. Why doesn't it do so in diabetic individuals? The graph on the upper right displays so-called glucose tolerance curves for a normal person ( blue line ) and a diabetic ( red line ). After a night without food, each individual drank a test dose of 100 grams of glucose dissolved in water. Blood glucose levels were then monitored at 30-minute and one-hour intervals. The dotted line indicates the kidney threshold, the maximum concentration of blood glucose molecules (about 10 m M ) that the kidney is able to retrieve from the fluid passing through it when all of its glucose-transporting channels are being utilized full bore.      Making Inferences  a. Why do you suppose the diabetic individual took so much longer to recover from the test dose? b. Would you expect the normal individual to excrete glucose? explain. The diabetic individual? explain. Why Do Diabetics Excrete Glucose in Their Urine?  Late-onset diabetes is a serious and increasingly common disorder in which the body's cells lose their ability to respond to insulin, a hormone that is needed to trigger their uptake of glucose. As illustrated below, the binding of insulin to a receptor in the plasma membrane causes the rapid insertion of glucose transporter channels into the plasma membrane, allowing the cell to take up glucose. In diabetics, however, glucose molecules accumulate in the blood while the body's cells starve for the lack of them. In mild cases, blood glucose levels rise to several times the normal value of 4 m M; in severe, untreated cases, blood glucose levels may become enormously elevated, up tO<sub>2</sub>5 times the normal value. A characteristic symptom of even mild diabetes is the excretion of large amounts of glucose in the urine. The name of the disorder, diabetes mellitus , means excessive secretion of sweet urine. in normal individuals, by contrast, only trace amounts of glucose are excreted. The kidney very efficiently reabsorbs glucose molecules from the fluid passing through it. Why doesn't it do so in diabetic individuals? The graph on the upper right displays so-called glucose tolerance curves for a normal person ( blue line ) and a diabetic ( red line ). After a night without food, each individual drank a test dose of 100 grams of glucose dissolved in water. Blood glucose levels were then monitored at 30-minute and one-hour intervals. The dotted line indicates the kidney threshold, the maximum concentration of blood glucose molecules (about 10 m M ) that the kidney is able to retrieve from the fluid passing through it when all of its glucose-transporting channels are being utilized full bore.      Making Inferences  a. Why do you suppose the diabetic individual took so much longer to recover from the test dose? b. Would you expect the normal individual to excrete glucose? explain. The diabetic individual? explain.
Making Inferences
a. Why do you suppose the diabetic individual took so much longer to recover from the test dose?
b. Would you expect the normal individual to excrete glucose? explain. The diabetic individual? explain.
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The Living World 8th Edition by George Johnson
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