Superb!!!! I am a veterinarian and trying to understand the fundamentals of the glucose biochemistry (and eventually details of the onset and management/prevention of diabetes in cats as they suffer from DM2 just like people). You explained the role of the GLUT very well!! Thank you!
Even though this vid was 4 years ago, I have to comment how amazingly fantastic you are at giving general oversights to tie all the big ideas together. There is just enough detail to track what is going to get the big picture, which is great postgrad review material. A lot of videos get too far into the nidy gridy, but the balance you put in your videos are sublime. Thank you sincerely from the core of my essence for your videos 🥰
Super helpful! You're are a good teacher and communicator. That tidbit about how exercise promotes the surfacing of Glut4 is one I'll be using with my patients at the hospital. About 50%-75% of my patients have DM2, so now I have ammo to encourage them to exercise!
Leave the explanation ..just focus on his method to explain and one more thing he is so handsome which make me to say ..Perhapes , i would be like hime .👀
Leave the explanation ..just focus on his method to explain and one more thing he is so handsome which make me to say ..Perhapes , i would be like hime .👀
Amazing, thank you! I have been struggling through my text books trying to connect the dots between the processes and you have just done that for me! I can breath again lol!
The different Glucose Transporters are very well explained. But the writings are clearly visible. There should have better clarity in the explanation. Overall very useful information is given.
Interesting video! Our son who is 7 month’s old now has a very rare disease called glucose-galactose malabsorption. That means he does not have the enzyme or the “siccors” in the intestines so the body can absorb sugar. We live in Sweden and the disease is most common in the northern part of the country. Our doctor have had 6 patients with the disease and that’s not many. and we are lucky that our hospital in the city called Umeå have best knowledge. They said that the disease is even more uncommon in the us. I’m out here on TH-cam to collect more knowledge about his condition, but not even TH-cam have that much of info and videos about it. That tells me the disease is very uncommon. It’s will be a interesting ride with changed diet for me and my girlfriend and when he goes to school.
I hope they find treatment for this disease , tell us the a updates about your son and how he coping with the disease, I become curious about the disease, I wish to your son a recovery ❤
He is 1year and 3months now and its going pretty Good. Its hard to find and make different meals and the imagination comes to a halt sometimes. He’s healthy and up and running. We have found out that he can’t eat alot of water melon, and strawberries. Otherwise the stomach will be angry.
A question please Why in case of hypoglycemia the patient feels good immediately after having sugar? In apsortion if glucose is fast enough to do that?
But Galactose goes through the GLUT 2 to the liver to katalyse to glucose-6-phosphat to be glycolysed? Isn‘t it? Did you make a mistake or did I missunderstood something? I‘d appreciate for answers
So we need sodium ion to absorb glucose? Does that mean we need salt to absorb glucose? and those who don't eat salt cannot have proper absorption of nutrients?
We don't WANT glucose to make energy. If you understand the Randall cycle you will understand that if we present glucose we will reduce fat use for energy creation. This is a sliding scale, and eventually will block. BUT if we only present fat the same Randall cycle will restrict and eventually block glucose. Eating carbs restricts and eventually blocks fat and eating fat restricts then blocks carbs. So you have a choice carbs or animal fat. Which is no choice because carbs cannot provide our nutrient needs but animal fats can. Over 3 million years of evolution has seen to that.
@@DrMattDrMikehere 56:52 dr lustig explains how the liver metabolizes fructose. He doesn't mention it turning into glucose th-cam.com/video/dBnniua6-oM/w-d-xo.html
EUREKA!! 10 mins of this video >>>> me processing the prof's lecture for 4 hours.. THANK YOU
You are exceptionally good at explaining processes! Thank you so much for the effort and time you put into your videos!
Superb!!!! I am a veterinarian and trying to understand the fundamentals of the glucose biochemistry (and eventually details of the onset and management/prevention of diabetes in cats as they suffer from DM2 just like people). You explained the role of the GLUT very well!!
Thank you!
Even though this vid was 4 years ago, I have to comment how amazingly fantastic you are at giving general oversights to tie all the big ideas together. There is just enough detail to track what is going to get the big picture, which is great postgrad review material. A lot of videos get too far into the nidy gridy, but the balance you put in your videos are sublime. Thank you sincerely from the core of my essence for your videos 🥰
Super helpful! You're are a good teacher and communicator. That tidbit about how exercise promotes the surfacing of Glut4 is one I'll be using with my patients at the hospital. About 50%-75% of my patients have DM2, so now I have ammo to encourage them to exercise!
the best lesson on glucose, explained so perfectly and clearly!!!! THANK YOU SO MUCH !!!!!!
I wish he was my Bio teacher :'( I understand this process so clearly now and the cute accent is a plus
Feels like someone is building up a crush 😃
+++
You are unbelievably underrated
Always good te recap on transporters! GLUT and SGLT form the basis. Every medstudent should know about them.
The God gifted you as my lecturer
Thank you sir
Being a best part of my examination
Exceptionally easy-to-understand explanation, well done
You are so good and very helpful; the only problem is you speak so fast! Thank you much, we benefit from your videos.
Problably the best video about this!
wow!!! I wish we had teachers like him... so beautifully explained...
Leave the explanation ..just focus on his method to explain and one more thing he is so handsome which make me to say ..Perhapes , i would be like hime .👀
Leave the explanation ..just focus on his method to explain and one more thing he is so handsome which make me to say ..Perhapes , i would be like hime .👀
I can listen to you all day! Thank you !!
Amazing, thank you! I have been struggling through my text books trying to connect the dots between the processes and you have just done that for me! I can breath again lol!
What is the difference between transport of D and L glucose across the membrane
Excellent video. I shared with a diabetic group... Thank you!
Your videos are extremely helpful:) straight to the point ! Bless you 😃
Superb!!! Very well organized!
Thank God for you tube. You're the best
Wow , it couldn't have been explained better!
Nicely done. I like the simplicity
This saved my bacon. Thankyou.
Great video, thank you!!
Just a suggestion.
For Glut-1, it can also be Big Bad Boys to easily remember BBB, Baby/Fetus and Blood.
Best explanations ive come across Dr💯🙌🏻
Amazing lecture, you are a great teacher thank you ❤
Wow you are awesome :) you make something so complicated so simple and memorable. Thank you Thank you ;)
This was so helpful.
Loved it.
You are amazing. Thank you.😀
You are very skillful
Excellent overview. 🔥
God bless you
Very good this is so perfect
I really appreciate your video 🤍🤍it’s really perfect
The different Glucose Transporters are very well explained. But the writings are clearly visible. There should have better clarity in the explanation. Overall very useful information is given.
great video
so helpful! Thank youuuu!!!
Interesting video! Our son who is 7 month’s old now has a very rare disease called glucose-galactose malabsorption. That means he does not have the enzyme or the “siccors” in the intestines so the body can absorb sugar. We live in Sweden and the disease is most common in the northern part of the country. Our doctor have had 6 patients with the disease and that’s not many. and we are lucky that our hospital in the city called Umeå have best knowledge. They said that the disease is even more uncommon in the us. I’m out here on TH-cam to collect more knowledge about his condition, but not even TH-cam have that much of info and videos about it. That tells me the disease is very uncommon. It’s will be a interesting ride with changed diet for me and my girlfriend and when he goes to school.
I hope they find treatment for this disease , tell us the a updates about your son and how he coping with the disease, I become curious about the disease, I wish to your son a recovery ❤
@@noura..6899 Thank you so much:)
He is 1year and 3months now and its going pretty Good. Its hard to find and make different meals and the imagination comes to a halt sometimes. He’s healthy and up and running. We have found out that he can’t eat alot of water melon, and strawberries. Otherwise the stomach will be angry.
This was cool, thank you
👌👌👏👏excellent ❤
I love the explanation
genial, amazing, brilliant, unforgetable , breathtaking, hell,
Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious even
Thank you very much sir...It helped me a lot...
Thank you sir it helped me a lot...
So Cool! Amazing! I love your teaching! Thanks......
Thank you Doc
A question please
Why in case of hypoglycemia the patient feels good immediately after having sugar?
In apsortion if glucose is fast enough to do that?
very clear, thanks
Super lecture thanks Sir
But Galactose goes through the GLUT 2 to the liver to katalyse to glucose-6-phosphat to be glycolysed? Isn‘t it? Did you make a mistake or did I missunderstood something? I‘d appreciate for answers
What is the difference between the transport of D and L glucose across the membrane?
damn this helped and it's very interesting
Intera site cells??? I’ve never heard of these and I’m trying to figure out what type of cells these are !
your video is helpful
You got a new subscriber...fuckingly nailed it
Almost forgot I have a question. Does cardiac muscle also require GLUT 4 to transport glucose or does it diffuse differently?
Does blood red cells also uses glucose to function
So we need sodium ion to absorb glucose? Does that mean we need salt to absorb glucose? and those who don't eat salt cannot have proper absorption of nutrients?
Perfect
My books say the GLUT 1 is in the human Pankreas and GLUT2 is only in the Pankreas of some animals
@Dr Matt & Dr Mike .................what about heart?? doesn't heart have any GLUT ??? please explain
Isn't fructose converted in the liver?
I am now angry at myself for not discovering this channel when I was a first or second year medical student.
heyy, what year are you in now ?
We don't WANT glucose to make energy. If you understand the Randall cycle you will understand that if we present glucose we will reduce fat use for energy creation. This is a sliding scale, and eventually will block. BUT if we only present fat the same Randall cycle will restrict and eventually block glucose.
Eating carbs restricts and eventually blocks fat and eating fat restricts then blocks carbs.
So you have a choice carbs or animal fat. Which is no choice because carbs cannot provide our nutrient needs but animal fats can.
Over 3 million years of evolution has seen to that.
yap
Fructose does not turn into glucose
David Musial yes it does.
@@DrMattDrMike in the liver?
Yes.
@@DrMattDrMikehere 56:52 dr lustig explains how the liver metabolizes fructose. He doesn't mention it turning into glucose
th-cam.com/video/dBnniua6-oM/w-d-xo.html
scholar.google.com/scholar_lookup?journal=Metabolism&title=Quantitation+of+the+pathways+followed+in+the+conversion+of+fructose+to+glucose+in+liver&author=V+Chandramouli&author=K+Kumaran&author=K+Ekberg&author=J+Wahren&author=BR+Landau&volume=42&publication_year=1993&pages=1420-1423&pmid=8231836&doi=10.1016/0026-0495(93)90192-Q&
Hi stranger. Just wanted to let you know that Jesus loves you and so do I ✝️❤