Anaesthesia & intensive care medicine
Volume 8, Issue 7 , Pages 295-298, July 2007

Hormonal control of metabolism: regulation of plasma glucose

Robert Yeo, PhD, is Metabolic Biochemistry Lecturer in Phase 1 Medicine at the University of Durham. His research interests include virology and how host cell factors influence viral assembly

Marina Sawdon, PhD, is Physiology Lecturer in Phase 1 Medicine at the University of Durham, Queen's Campus. She has a PhD from the University of Durham and has worked as a research fellow at the James Cook University Hospital, Middlesbrough, UK

Abstract 

The control of plasma glucose needs to be tightly monitored because hyperglycaemia and hypoglycaemia can lead to severe clinical problems, including death. In this article the major mechanism for the transport of glucose into and out of the blood and how that mechanism is used to monitor the circulating concentrations of glucose are discussed. A number of hormones regulate glucose in response to changes in plasma concentrations. Insulin promotes the removal of glucose and its conversion to glycogen. Glucagon, in response to falling glucose concentrations, increases the breakdown of glycogen and the release of glucose from the liver. There are many other hormones that play a part in assisting the functions of insulin and glucagon. Failures in the appropriate production of such hormones may lead to the unregulated changes in plasma glucose and subsequent health problems.

Keywords: glucose homeostasis, hormonal regulation

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PII: S1472-0299(07)00108-7

doi:10.1016/j.mpaic.2007.04.009

Anaesthesia & intensive care medicine
Volume 8, Issue 7 , Pages 295-298, July 2007