DiabetesWellBeing.com

What is The Role of The Liver and
Blood Sugar Management?


The link between the liver and blood sugar management actually has a lot to do with your mother. Did your mother ever tell you: "Don't drink (alcohol) on an empty stomach." While there may be a variety of reasons for this advice, your liver and how it process glucose is a key part of it.

However, most people are not even aware that this link exists. Let's take a look at how this works.

Liver and Blood Sugar Management - Wine and Food

As you may know, we get our energy from food. The energy from the food is absorbed into the blood as glucose (blood sugar).

The glucose travels through the blood to the body's individual cells and is converted to energy.

Sometimes we eat more food (energy) than we need, so the extra glucose is stored in muscle, the liver and fat as a substance called glycogen.

Between meals our blood glucose (sugar) drops and our body needs access to some of this stored energy. Glucogen, a hormone made in the pancreas, signals the liver to break down or convert some glycogen into glucose for the needed energy.

Pretty straight forward. However, one problem for diabetics is the effect of alcohol on this process.

Alcohol is treated by the body as a poison and seeks to rid itself of the alcohol as quickly as possible. The liver is responsible for cleansing alcohol from our system and prioritizes this function almost over all other functions, including the release of stored glucose into the blood.

Thus, diabetics can develop hypoglycemia (low blood sugar) because the liver is not releasing enough of the stored blood glucose.

So, what is the moral of the liver and blood glucose story?

Listen to your mother and "don't drink alcohol on an empty stomach". Better yet, maybe don't drink alcohol at all? I'll leave that between you and your mom.

Share/Bookmark




Source:

National Institute of Health, nih.gov, Hypoglycemia, NIH Publication No. 09�3926 October 2008.


diabetes

Lower Blood Sugar

nutrisystem d

Clinically Proven to Help Lower Your Blood Glucose Levels and Weight!

Read Our Review



Add Social Bookmarks

Like This Site?
You can use the buttons below to add us to your favorite social networking and bookmarking services





Return to top
Home | Contact Us | Blog | Site Policies | Sitemap

All information provided by this website is for informational purposes only, and should not be
relied upon as a substitute for consultation with a medical doctor or other healthcare provider.

Copyright © 2009-2010 - DiabetesWellBeing.com - All Rights Reserved