Catabolic Health Dictionary

Catabolic: From 1 Different Sources


The part of metabolism that deals with destruction or simplification of more complex compounds. Catabolism mostly results in the release of energy. Examples: the release of glucose by the liver, the combustion of glucose by cells.
Health Source: Herbal Medical
Author: Health Dictionary

Anabolic

Promoting anabolism. Specifically, an agent or function that stimulates the organization of smaller substances into larger ones. Examples: making a starch out of sugars, a protein out of amino acids, or making triglycerides out of fatty acids are anabolic functions. Anabolic steroids are internal or external substances that will induce increased body size or mass. The opposite of CATABOLIC.... anabolic

Hypergluconeogenesis

Also hyperglyconeogenesis. The state of excessive synthesis of glycogen (storage starch) or glucose by the liver, derived from non-sugar sources, such as amino acids, lactate and the glycerol remnants from triglyceride breakdown. In strictly subclinical terms it signifies a yinny, catabolic excess, wherein building materials are less desirable than FUEL, and it is singularly difficult to buff up in any way. There are disease states where this can occur...starvation would induce it as well, but I am not addressing this aspect, since I don’t consider this to be the realm of alternative approaches.... hypergluconeogenesis

Metabolism

The sum total of changes in an organism in order to achieve a balance (homeostasis). Catabolic burns up, anabolic stores and builds up; the sum of their work is metabolism.... metabolism

Bun

blood urea nitrogen: a measurement of nitrogen in the form of urea in the blood, usually reported as mg/dl, in common usage in the USA (each molecule of urea has two nitrogen atoms, each of molar mass 14 g/mol). Elsewhere, the concentration of urea in the serum is reported as mmol/L:

BUN or serum urea is used as a measure of kidney function but is less precise than the serum creatinine or estimates of glomerular filtration rate based on the serum creatinine (see eGFR). A disproportionate rise in blood urea nitrogen (or serum urea) compared with creatinine may be seen with volume depletion, cardiac failure, high protein diets, gastrointestinal bleeding, loss of muscle (the classic example is the bilateral amputee), and catabolic states associated with severe burns and fevers.... bun

Catabolism

n. the chemical decomposition of complex substances by the body to form simpler ones, accompanied by the release of energy. The substances broken down include nutrients in food (carbohydrates, proteins, etc.) as well as the body’s storage products (such as glycogen). See also metabolism. —catabolic adj.... catabolism



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