What happens to your body after eating a meal? | Metabolism
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- čas přidán 26. 07. 2024
- In this video, Dr Mike explains what happens metabolically in the fed state (immediately after eating a meal).
This 'absorptive-state' is characterised by high insulin levels and high blood glucose levels. Dr Mike explains what happens to the glucose, amino acids, fatty acids, and glycerol we have recently absorbed from our meal.
Well done Dr Mike. Please don’t stop doing your work. You’ve helped me massively.
This was explained so damn well !
Dr. Mike -- amazing content again. I have to say, I supplement my course work with your videos! I love getting the 30,000ft view of all these processes. I truly feel I can grasp the content in a much deeper way once I review some of your (and others') videos here on youtube. Please keep up the amazing work!
Currently studying this for my exam tomorrow and the video notification popped up right as I checked for CZcams videos! Thought that was kinda cool :b thank you for the video!
I’ve got a Biochem final on Monday and this is amazing. Thank you!!
This video was so helpful, thank you!!
Thank you so much for another informative vedio.I always gain new and different information from your explainations which I don't get from other doctors 'vedios for the same subject🙂
Fantastic teacher
Thank you doc 👍.
Thanks Dr Mike for this video it's really help me thanks a lot🥰🥰😍
nice explanation
Muy buena explicación
Very good job and very easy to understand. However, my question is that, does triglycerides and VLDL form also in the muscles ?
Hey Dr. Mike, can you please tell me what would be the effect of glucagon on well fed state?
Appreciate all you vids!
Negative feedback (if your healthy)
hi if one has high insulin sensativity, does it mean that less triglycerides would be stored but convert to ATP instead?
Think you forgot to mention that fatty acids can also be used as a fuel source in muscle tissue (at resting/aerobic exercise)
What about mono-saccharides such as fructose and galactose? Are they converted to glucose in the liver? This is not often discussed as glucose is always the focus when it comes to carbohydrate intake.
Yes, fructose and galactose are converted to glucose in the liver. There are some literature that observes the metabolism of fructose by the small intestine. Here is a paper about it: www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6032988/#:~:text=We%20find%20that%20small%20intestine,fructose%20overwhelm%20this%20shielding%20capacity.
Glucose is a monosaccharide.
Steve from blues clues got jacked!
Hey doc. Is this fed state based on a high carb diet.and if so what happens when u are on a carnivore diet or a ketogenic diet. Do some of the cycles get bypassed
I would think a carnivore diet contains all three macro-molecules such as in beef or chicken with the only difference is the ratio of these. So the story remains the same. In a strict ketogenic diet you'd eventually run out of available glucose and glycogen to which you're now resorting to lipolysis.
Like how he pronounces this CoA as "Kawaii"
Yes
Video makes sense. So what's your split Doc? Can't just be PPL. Great arms ngl.
Hi sir ,I recently graduate want to apply usmle please guide me
Hi sir ,I recently graduate want to apply usmle please guide me