Pancreas and insulin: An Overview
Pancreas and insulin
Your pancreas is one of the organs of your digestive
system. It lies in your abdomen, behind your stomach. It is a long thin
structure with 2 main functions:
·
producing
digestive enzymes to break down food; and
·
Producing
the hormones insulin and glucagon to control sugar levels in your body.
Production of digestive
enzymes
The pancreas produces secretions necessary for you to digest
food. The enzymes in these secretions allow your body to digest protein, fat
and starch from your food. The enzymes are produced in the acinar cells which
make up most of the pancreas. From the acinar cells the enzymes flow down
various channels into the pancreatic duct and then out into the duodenum. The
secretions are alkaline to balance the acidic juices and partially digested
food coming into the duodenum from the stomach.
Production of hormones to
control blood sugar levels
A small proportion (1-2 per cent) of the pancreas is made
up of other types of cells called islets of Langerhans. These cells sit in tiny
groups, like small islands, scattered throughout the tissue of the pancreas.
The islets of Langerhans contain alpha cells which secrete glucagon and beta
cells which secrete insulin.
Insulin and glucagon are hormones that work to regulate
the level of sugar (glucose) in the body to keep it within a healthy range.
Unlike the acinar cells, the islets of Langerhans do not have ducts and secrete
insulin and glucagon directly into the bloodstream.
Depending on what you’ve eaten, how much exercise your muscles
are doing, and how active your body cells are, the amount of glucose in your
bloodstream and cells varies. These 2 hormones have the job of keeping tight
control of the amount of glucose in your blood so that it doesn’t rise or fall
outside of healthy limits.
How insulin works
Insulin is released from the beta cells in your pancreas
in response to rising glucose in your bloodstream. After you eat a meal, any
carbohydrates you’ve eaten are broken down into glucose and passed into the
bloodstream. The pancreas detects this rise in blood glucose and starts to
secrete insulin.
Insulin works by improving the uptake of glucose from the
blood across cell membranes and into the cells of the body, and so takes
glucose out of the bloodstream. Once in the cells, the glucose is used as the
energy to fuel the cells doing their different jobs or is stored in the liver
or muscle cells as glycogen. This results in the glucose level of the blood
dropping, which then triggers the pancreas to switch off the release of
insulin.
The problem in people with diabetes is that either they
don’t produce enough insulin, or the insulin they do produce doesn’t work
properly, or their cells don’t respond properly to insulin. The net result is
that glucose isn’t cleared from their bloodstream and they have high blood
glucose levels which the body tries to clear by various compensatory methods,
such as increased urination.
How glucagon works
Glucagon has an opposite (antagonistic) effect to
insulin. When your blood glucose level falls, for example during exercise when
your muscles are using glucose for fuel, your pancreas detects the drop in
blood glucose. This prompts the pancreas to slow down the secretion of insulin,
but increase the output of glucagon.
The role of glucagon is to break down glycogen (the
stored form of glucose) in the liver. Then the liver releases glucose into the
bloodstream. This results in a rise in the blood glucose level to bring it back
to a healthy level, which in turn signals the pancreas to switch off glucagon
release.
The control of blood glucose levels operates by what is
known as a negative feedback mechanism. Here is a summary of the 2 control
loops.
When the blood glucose
level goes up
·
Blood
sugar (glucose) rises;
·
The
pancreas detects the rise;
·
The
pancreas pumps out insulin into the blood;
·
Insulin
helps the uptake of glucose into muscles and other cells;
·
This
causes the blood glucose level to fall to its normal set point; and
·
The
pancreas detects the fall and switches off insulin production.
When the blood glucose
level goes down
·
Blood
sugar (glucose) drops;
·
The
pancreas detects the drop in blood sugar;
·
The
pancreas switches on the output of glucagon into the blood;
·
Glucagon
signals the liver to break down glycogen into glucose;
·
The
liver releases glucose into the bloodstream;
·
Blood
glucose goes up to its normal set point; and
·
The
pancreas detects the rise in blood sugar and switches off glucagon release.

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