On the off chance that you encourage your Lab an excessive number of carbohydrates, the excess will be turned into a compound
called glycogen and put away in the liver or muscles.
This is
called glycogen stores.
... [T] he liver serves as a storehouse for glucose [blood sugar], keeping it in a concentrated form
called glycogen.
In the liver, it is reformed into long chains
called glycogen, which is a storage form of glucose (plants use amylopectin and amylose, animals use glycogen).
The storage form of glucose is
called glycogen.
When consumed in excess it is stored in the liver and muscles into a substance
called glycogen.
A small amount is stored as a starch
called glycogen, but the majority is stored as fat.
When you take in more glucose than your body needs, it stores the extra glucose in the liver and muscles in a form
called glycogen.
Carbohydrates have a storage depot in the body
called glycogen.
At this point, after the immediate energy requirements of all your body's tissues have been met, the excess glucose in your blood will be converted into a polysaccharide storage form of carbohydrate
called glycogen, the majority of which can be found in your muscles and liver.
As I understand it, a healthy person will store carbohydrates in their liver and muscles (
called glycogen), and after carbohydrates in the blood have been used up during exercise, glycogen stores will be used for fuel.
A small amount is stored as a starch
called glycogen, but the majority is stored as your main energy supply — fat.
We make something
called glycogen.
The science: Your body's main storage form of glucose is
called glycogen, which is stored mostly in your liver and muscles.
This is because the glucose which is stored for easy use in our liver is in a molecule
called glycogen which is bound up with a lot of water.
A small amount is stored as a starch
called glycogen in your body, but the majority is stored as your main energy supply — fat.
During exercise, the body releases stored energy
called glycogen to supply fuel to working muscle fibers.
One of the duties of your adrenal glands is to release adrenalin after you eat sugar or high - carbohydrate foods, as well as cortisol when you blood sugar drops, to allow you to access more stored sugar (
called glycogen) from the liver.
After exercise, when you have depleted your intramuscular stores of carbohydrate (
called glycogen) you need to re-stock so your body is fuelled up and ready to go for your next workout.
The stored form of glucose (in your liver and muscles) is
called glycogen.
Your liver works hard all night and needs a substance
called glycogen to function properly, and raw honey has enough glycogen to sustain a full eight hours of sleep.
After three to four days on a ketogenic diet, back - up stores of carbohydrates,
called glycogen, become depleted and ketosis kicks in, triggering some weight loss and the appearance of a leaner physique.
During your workout, your muscles are mainly fueled by the carbohydrates stored in muscle cells,
called glycogen, and secondarily by the free - floating carbs in the bloodstream, received from a recent meal.
How lithium stabilises mood is poorly understood but when the scientists investigated how it prolongs the lives of flies, they discovered a new drug target that could slow ageing — a molecule
called glycogen synthase kinase - 3 (GSK - 3).
In 2009, Usain Bolt set the world record in the 100 - meter dash, thanks in large part to a carb
called glycogen.
How lithium stabilises mood is poorly understood but when the scientists investigated how it prolongs the lives of flies, they discovered a new drug target that could slow aging — a molecule
called glycogen synthase kinase - 3 (GSK - 3).
«Most interestingly, we found a similar dynamic, or circadian, looping when we studied a gene
called Glycogen synthase 2,» says Felix Naef.
Not exact matches
In the fruit fly, the gene is active in fat bodies — which function as the liver in insects — as well as the midgut, antennae, and cells
called oenocytes, which appear to store
glycogen.
It is generally accepted that
glycogen synthesis requires an enzyme
called glycogenin, which catalyzes the formation of a sugar chain consisting of glucose molecules.
Surprisingly, the researchers found that
glycogen synthesis does not require a protein
called glycogenin, and that high
glycogen levels actually impair endurance muscle performance in mice.
The importance of proper
glycogen synthesis is illustrated by a fatal neurodegenerative condition
called Lafora disease.
Some of its main responsibilities is to clean the blood by getting rid of harmful chemicals produced by the body, produce a liquid
called bile which helps the body break down fat from food and store the carbs in the form
glycogen.
Called the MonaLisa Touch, the laser stimulates the regeneration of collagen, which improves vaginal elasticity and moisture, and helps restore levels of glycogen that are needed for healthy bacteria (called lactobacilli) to flo
Called the MonaLisa Touch, the laser stimulates the regeneration of collagen, which improves vaginal elasticity and moisture, and helps restore levels of
glycogen that are needed for healthy bacteria (
called lactobacilli) to flo
called lactobacilli) to flourish.
Any glucose that is excessive of what the body needs will then get stored as
glycogen, and any fat that isn't utilized gets stored as well (via a process
called lipogenesis).
This is
called glycogenolysis (burning of
glycogen) and happens most nights (assuming you don't eat at night).
Since the body can not
call upon its
Glycogen stores for its exertions, it turns to fat and this is why an early morning workout will help in effective weight loss.
Your pancreas secretes a chemical
called insulin to remove this sugar and put it into (1) fat stores, (2) muscle
glycogen stores or (3) liver
glycogen stores.
It features periods of higher carb eating
called refeeds, typically one time per week in order to supply the body with the muscle
glycogen needed to perform well during high intensity workouts.
If you were a really keen student in high school, you may remember that insulin takes sugar away from your blood and stores it in your liver and muscles by converting it to a molecule
called «
glycogen».
Additionally, regular exercise will help upregulate a protein
called GLUT - 4 which acts to pull sugar out of the blood stream and store it in muscles or the liver as
glycogen (7).
The excess liver glucose that can not be put into the full
glycogen storage must be changed into triglycerides through a process
called «de novo lipogenesis».
Moreover, your body can not burn fat while it still has glucose available, and will
call on the liver to release
glycogen before burning fat.
As I mentioned above, in absence of sufficient
glycogen within the liver and muscles, the body will undergo a process
called gluconeogenesis, in which protein is broken down into the amino acids and converted into glucose.
If there's no more glucose or
glycogen to be had, a process
called gluconeogenesis begins in the liver («gluco» = glucose, «neo» = new, «genesis» = to make).
At this stage,
glycogen stores have been depleted and blood glucose is maintained through a process
called gluconeogenesis: glucose is created from fat, lactate and protein.
The process of converting stored
glycogen to glucose is
called glycogenolysis (breaking down
glycogen).
The third type is also recurrent but is common in quarter horses, draft horses, and other breeds that is due to a defect in storing the compound
glycogen in the muscle; it's
called polysaccharide storage myopathy or PSSM.