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Results 11 - 19 of 19 for Glucose transport disorder
  1. ... movement (migration) of cells, production of new proteins, transport of ... helps control blood glucose levels. PI3K signaling may also play a role ...
  2. ... tone (hypotonia), frequent infections, episodes of low blood glucose ... disorders. Affected children tend to have impaired communication and ...
  3. ... that is involved in protein production, processing, and transport. Wolframin's ... control blood glucose levels.WFS1 gene variants lead to the production ...
  4. ... deficiency. Since the CBG protein is needed to transport cortisol to ... features of the disorder may influence each other and that fatigue could ...
  5. ... the white population in the United States. The disease occurs in 1 in 2,500 to 3,500 white ... a channel that transports negatively charged particles called chloride ions into and ...
  6. ... control levels of blood sugar, also called blood glucose. Iron accumulation in the pancreas reduces the cells' ability to make insulin, which impairs blood glucose regulation and leads to the signs and symptoms ...
  7. ... sugars during digestion. Sucrose is broken down into glucose and another simple sugar called fructose, and maltose is broken down into two glucose molecules. People with congenital sucrase-isomaltase deficiency cannot ...
  8. ... often develop diabetes mellitus, a condition in which glucose levels can become dangerously high, at an early ... making a protein called thiamine transporter 1, which transports thiamine into cells. Thiamine is found in many ...
  9. ... play a role in maintaining normal blood sugar (glucose) levels, help trigger nerve cell signaling in the ... childhood. Most affected children first develop low blood glucose (hypoglycemia). These hypoglycemic children can fail to grow ...
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