Date of Award
2-1945
Degree Type
Bachelors Essay
Degree Name
Bachelor of Science (BS)
Department
Biomedical Sciences
First Advisor
J.R. Koch
Second Advisor
J.C. Perry
Third Advisor
Estelle Downer
Abstract
Present day knowledge concerning the liver is derived from many sources and the accumulation of many methods of investigation. Sugar, which is needed by the body for energy, is stored in the liver as glycogen. Claude Bernard (26), an eminent physiologist, was the first to suspect that carbohydrates were stored in the liver. Faulty glycogen synthesis and hydrolysis results in one of our most widespread diseases, diabetes. Thus, many biochemists and physiologists have tried to find the mechanism of the process, and the primary and secondary facts which affect glycogenesis and glycogenolysis. Although the chemical secretions and hormones of such organs as the pancreas, the pituitaries, and the adrenals do exert an influence, recent work by such men as Soskin, (24) and Simpson and Macleod (23), indicates that the principal action lies in the liver itself. Nevertheless, the importance of the internal glands cannot be overlooked.
Recommended Citation
Zingsheim, Virginia Mary, "The Effect of Adrenaline Injection on Glycogenolysis and Glycogenesis in Rat Livers" (1945). Bachelors’ Theses. 1256.
https://epublications.marquette.edu/bachelor_essays/1256
Included in
Animal Experimentation and Research Commons, Biochemistry Commons, Endocrine System Diseases Commons, Hormones, Hormone Substitutes, and Hormone Antagonists Commons, Molecular, Genetic, and Biochemical Nutrition Commons
Comments
A Thesis submitted to the Faculty of the College of Liberal Arts of Marquette University in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Bachelor of Science, Milwaukee, Wisconsin.