GCSE Biology explores how hormones like glucagon help control blood glucose concentration, making sure cells receive a steady supply of energy even between meals or during exercise.
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You can find more about this topic by visiting BBC Bitesize - Maintaining internal environments
The pancreas is an organ whose function is to release hormones and enzymes into the bloodstream
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It has the opposite effect to insulin
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Glycogen is the stored form of glucose in animals. Starch is the stored form of glucose in plants
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The liver has many other jobs too
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Hormones are the chemical messengers of the body
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It stimulates the liver to break down the glycogen to glucose which passes into the bloodstream
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When we starve, glucose levels in the blood fall and this is the trigger for the release of glucagon
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When the level of blood sugar falls outside of the normal levels, it can eventually be fatal
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The pancreas is about 15 cm long and fits across the back of the abdomen, behind the stomach and below the liver. It opens into the duodenum (small intestine)
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Control of blood glucose is only one example of homeostasis. There are many more including thermoregulation and osmoregulation
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