What happens to excess glucose in the body

Medically Reviewed by Carol DerSarkissian, MD on June 13, 2020

Glucose comes from the Greek word for "sweet." It's a type of sugar you get from foods you eat, and your body uses it for energy. As it travels through your bloodstream to your cells, it's called blood glucose or blood sugar.

Insulin is a hormone that moves glucose from your blood into the cells for energy and storage. People with diabetes have higher-than-normal levels of glucose in their blood. Either they don't have enough insulin to move it through or their cells don't respond to insulin as well as they should.

High blood glucose for a long period of time can damage your kidneys, eyes, and other organs.

It mainly comes from foods rich in carbohydrates, like bread, potatoes, and fruit. As you eat, food travels down your esophagus to your stomach. There, acids and enzymes break it down into tiny pieces. During that process, glucose is released.

It goes into your intestines where it's absorbed. From there, it passes into your bloodstream. Once in the blood, insulin helps glucose get to your cells.

Your body is designed to keep the level of glucose in your blood constant. Beta cells in your pancreas monitor your blood sugar level every few seconds. When your blood glucose rises after you eat, the beta cells release insulin into your bloodstream. Insulin acts like a key, unlocking muscle, fat, and liver cells so glucose can get inside them.

Most of the cells in your body use glucose along with amino acids (the building blocks of protein) and fats for energy. But it's the main source of fuel for your brain. Nerve cells and chemical messengers there need it to help them process information. Without it, your brain wouldn't be able to work well.

After your body has used the energy it needs, the leftover glucose is stored in little bundles called glycogen in the liver and muscles. Your body can store enough to fuel you for about a day.

After you haven't eaten for a few hours, your blood glucose level drops. Your pancreas stops churning out insulin. Alpha cells in the pancreas begin to produce a different hormone called glucagon. It signals the liver to break down stored glycogen and turn it back into glucose.

That travels to your bloodstream to replenish your supply until you're able to eat again. Your liver can also make its own glucose using a combination of waste products, amino acids, and fats.

Your blood sugar level normally rises after you eat. Then it dips a few hours later as insulin moves glucose into your cells. Between meals, your blood sugar should be less than 100 milligrams per deciliter (mg/dl). This is called your fasting blood sugar level.

There are two types of diabetes:

  • In type 1 diabetes, your body doesn't have enough insulin. The immune system attacks and destroys cells of the pancreas, where insulin is made.
  • In type 2 diabetes, the cells don't respond to insulin like they should. So the pancreas needs to make more and more insulin to move glucose into the cells. Eventually, the pancreas is damaged and can't make enough insulin to meet the body's needs.

Without enough insulin, glucose can't move into the cells. The blood glucose level stays high. A level over 200 mg/dl 2 hours after a meal or over 125 mg/dl fasting is high blood glucose, called hyperglycemia.

Too much glucose in your bloodstream for a long period of time can damage the vessels that carry oxygen-rich blood to your organs. High blood sugar can increase your risk for:

People with diabetes need to test their blood sugar often. Exercise, diet, and medicine can help keep blood glucose in a healthy range and prevent these complications.

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Interviewer: Dr. Juan Gallegos, he's a liver expert at the University of Utah Hospital. I'm hoping you can help clarify something that I've heard, I don't know if this is true of not, but I've heard that if you eat an excess of sugar that your liver can't process it properly and it just turns it immediately into fat. So if I'm eating a tub of ice cream every night, I'm going to get a lot fatter because of that, is that true?

Dr. Juan Gallegos: That is partly true because we know there's a very close interplay between the liver, which is the chemical factory of our bodies, with the pancreas, which is the main regulator of your blood sugar and with the fat cells or adipocytes, which are also a big endocrine organ. So that interplay has to do with changes in your blood sugar, the things that you eat and trying to control the blood sugar back to normal levels, and it also has to do with making cholesterol, making triglycerides, which are fat molecules that store energy. So yes, if you eat too much sugar or too much carbohydrates, basically, all this energy has to be stored somehow and normally that storage is inside the fat cells or fat droplets, and those can accumulate also inside the liver, and cause what we call fatty liver disease.

Interviewer: So what exactly is happening? I eat a whole bunch of sugar, it goes into my body, goes into my stomach, gets ingested by my system and then what?

Dr. Juan Gallegos: Then it goes into your blood stream and then the blood stream, when your pancreas senses that there's very high blood sugar levels, then it will secrete something called insulin, and that insulin will make that sugar, that glucose go back into certain cells, especially liver cells, muscle cells, and other cells so that they can use that as energy. But that excess energy that you have, if it's not used then it has to be stored somehow.

Interviewer: Yeah.

Dr. Juan Gallegos: The way it's stored is basically in the fat cells or adipocytes, but also sometimes it's stored in other places where it shouldn't be.

Interviewer: What about the part of the thing that I heard, that the liver can't process it all, what does that mean exactly?

Dr. Juan Gallegos: It's not necessarily that it can't process it all, but the way, if you overcharge the system, then the processing of those things might be abnormal and that's part of the reason why people who have issues with their weight or have diabetes and high blood sugar can have something called fatty liver disease and that's because the fat starts accumulating inside the liver cells as they try to adapt to all this excess fat that's coming into the system, through your meal, but also through increased blood sugar that ultimately is transformed into fat deposits if it's not used elsewhere.

Interviewer: All right so you drink a 64 oz soda, you're getting an amount of sugar, how much food would you have to eat to get that kind of sugar?

Dr. Juan Gallegos: Well that would be a lot because in the past we did have availability of all this food readily available to us, so our bodies and our genes were adapted to struggle with being undernourished for most of the time. But yes, over the last several hundred years that has changed and now it's very easy for us to obtain our food without having to chase after it.

Interviewer: Or specific elements like even sugar.

Dr. Juan Gallegos: Correct.

Interviewer: You know if you eat a lot of sugar, in a teaspoon, it would take you a lot of potatoes to get that amount of sugar.

Dr. Juan Gallegos: That is true.

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updated: August 22, 2018

originally published: July 16, 2014

What happens to excess glucose in the body

What happens to excess glucose in the body
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What happens to excess glucose in the body

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Solution :

Excess of glucose is stored in the liver as glycogen and as fat in adipose tissues.Liver can reconvert the glycogen into glucose.

Video transcript

"hello friends welcome to lido's online homework solving session in this we are going to today look at the following question the question says what is the faith of excess glucose in our body in this question we have to tell what happens to the excess glucose which is created in our body so the uh solution for this is whatever is the excess glucose which is created in a body it is stored in the liver in the form of glycogen and it is also stored as a fat in adipose tissue this is a form of a tissue and whatever is the excess glucose that is stored in the liver as a glycogen liver can convert this glycogen that is the glycogen which is stored into liver is can this glycogen can be converted into glucose so this is how we answer the question hope you understood the solution if you have any queries drop a comment below and subscribe to the channel for regular updates thank you"

What happens to excess glucose in the body
What happens to excess glucose in the body