Journal of Clinical Diabetes
Open Access

Our Group organises 3000+ Global Conferenceseries Events every year across USA, Europe & Asia with support from 1000 more scientific Societies and Publishes 700+ Open Access Journals which contains over 50000 eminent personalities, reputed scientists as editorial board members.

Open Access Journals gaining more Readers and Citations
700 Journals and 15,000,000 Readers Each Journal is getting 25,000+ Readers

This Readership is 10 times more when compared to other Subscription Journals (Source: Google Analytics)
  • Perspective Article   
  • J Clin Diabetes 2022, Vol 6(1): 1
  • DOI: 10.4172/jcds.1000129

A Brief Commentary on Blood Sugar Levels

Clark James*
Department of Nephrology, Vanderbilt Center for Kidney Disease, Tennessee, United States
*Corresponding Author: Clark James, Department of Nephrology, Vanderbilt Center for Kidney Disease, Tennessee, United States, Email: jamesclrk@edu.org

Received: 07-Jan-2022 / Manuscript No. JCDS-22-129 / Editor assigned: 10-Jan-2022 / PreQC No. JCDS-22-129 (PQ) / Reviewed: 14-Jan-2022 / QC No. JCDS-22-129 / Revised: 21-Jan-2022 / Manuscript No. JCDS-22-129 (R) / Published Date: 28-Jan-2022 DOI: 10.4172/jcds.1000129

Perspective

The glycaemia, also known as blood sugar position, blood sugar attention, or blood glucose position is the measure of glucose concentrated in the blood of humans or other creatures. Roughly 4 grams of glucose, a simple sugar, is present in the blood of a 70 kg (154 lb) human at all times. The body tightly regulates blood glucose situations as a part of metabolic homeostasis. Glucose is stored in cadaverous muscle and liver cells in the form of glycogen; in fasting individualities, blood glucose is maintained at a constant position at the expenditure of glycogen stores in the liver and cadaverous muscle [1].

In humans, a blood glucose position of 4 grams, or about a tablespoon, is critical for normal function in a number of apkins, and the mortal brain consumes roughly 60 of blood glucose in fasting, sedentary individualities. A patient elevation in blood glucose leads to glucose toxin, which contributes to cell dysfunction and the pathology grouped together as complications of diabetes. Glucose can be transported from the bowel or liver to other apkins in the body via the bloodstream. Cellular glucose uptake is primarily regulated by insulin, a hormone produced in the pancreas. Glucose situations are generally smallest in the morning, before the first mess of the day, and rise after reflections for an hour or two by a many mile-moles. Blood sugar situations outside the normal range may be an index of a medical condition. A persistently high position is appertained to as hyperglycemia; low situations are appertained to as hypoglycemia. Diabetes mellitus is characterized by patient hyperglycemia from any of several causes, and it's the most prominent complaint related to the failure of blood sugar regulation. There are different styles of testing and measuring blood sugar situations [2].

The input of alcohol causes an original swell in blood sugar and latterly tends to beget situations to fall. Also, certain medicines can increase or drop glucose situations.

Normal value ranges may vary slightly between laboratories. Numerous factors affect a person's blood sugar position. The body's homeostatic medium of blood sugar regulation (known as glucose homeostasis), when operating typically, restores the blood sugar position to a narrow range of about 4.4 to6.1 mmol/ L (79 to 110 mg/ dL) (as measured by a fasting blood glucose test) [3].

Normal blood glucose position (tested while fasting) fornon-diabetics is between3.9 and7.1 mmol/ L (70 and 130 mg/ dL). The global mean dieting tube blood glucose position in humans is about5.5 mmol/ L (100 mg/ dL); still, this position fluctuates throughout the day. Blood sugar situations for those without diabetes and who aren't dieting should be below6.9 mmol/ L (125 mg/ dL). The blood glucose target range for diabetics, according to the American Diabetes Association, should be5.0 –7.2 mmol/ l (90 – 130 mg/ dL) before refections and lower than 10 mmol/ L (180 mg/ dL) two hours after refections (as measured by a blood glucose examiner) [4].

Despite extensively variable intervals between refections or the occasional consumption of refections with a substantial carbohydrate cargo, mortal blood glucose situations tend to remain within the normal range. Still, shortly after eating, the blood glucose position may rise, innon-diabetics, temporarily over to7.8 mmol/ L (140 mg/ dL) or slightly further. For people with diabetes maintaining" tight diabetes control", the American Diabetes Association recommends apost-meal glucose position of lower than 10 mmol/ L (180 mg/ dL) and a fasting tube glucose of 3.9 to7.2 mmol/ L (70 – 130 mg/ dL) [5].

The factual quantum of glucose in the blood and body fluids is veritably small. In a healthy grown-up joker of 75 kg (165 lb) with a blood volume of 5 L, a blood glucose position of 5.5 mmol/ L (100 mg/ dL) amounts to 5g, original to about a teaspoonful of sugar. Part of the reason why this quantum is so small is that, to maintain an affluence of glucose into cells, enzymes modify glucose by adding phosphate or other groups to it.

References

    1. Cox DL, Nelson MM (2013) Lehninger principles of biochemistry (6th edn). New York pp: 950.
    2. Cox MM, Lehninger AL, Nelson DL (2017) Lehninger Principles of Biochemistry. New York pp: 248-49.
    3. Ginsberg BH (2009) Factors affecting blood glucose monitoring: sources of errors in measurement. J Diabetes Sci Technol 3(4): 903-13.

Indexed at       Google Scholar      Crossref

    1. Renschler HE, Weicker H, von Baeyer H (1965) The upper limit of glucose concentration in the urine of healthy subjects. Deutsche Medizinische Wochenschrift 90(53): 2349-53.

Indexed at            Google Scholar    

    1. Tankasala D, Linnes JC (2019) Noninvasive glucose detection in exhaled breath condensate. Transl Res 213: 1-22.

Indexed at          Google Scholar    Crossref

Citation: James C (2022) A Brief Commentary on Blood Sugar Levels. J Clin Diabetes 6: 129. DOI: 10.4172/jcds.1000129

Copyright: © James C. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

Top