NOT MEDICAL ADVICE - CONSULT A DOCTOR FOR QUESTIONS ABOUT YOUR HEALTH
As can easily be observed, the body easily stores tens of kilos of fat. As each kilo of fat can power an adult for many days, an average person will carry enough energy to survive for a month. An overweight person often carries enough fuel to survive for months on end. 3
As glycogen, sugar is stored in the liver and in muscles. Both liver and muscles can convert glucose to glycogen. The liver can convert glycogen back to glucose but muscles can't. Muscles can however use glycogen directly if needed, or release it into the bloodstream.
Very notable is the limited amount of sugars which can be stored. Ingested glucose and small carbohydrates like table sugar travel nearly directly to the bloodstream. While this allows the body to rapidly utilize ingested sugar, the amount of glucose allowable in blood is easily exceeded.
People of average weight will generally have in the order of 5 grams of glucose in their blood at any one time. Levels above 10 grams are considered too high. This means that a regular candy bar, which contains in the order of 30 grams of sugar, poses a great challenge to the body.
When glucose arrives in excess of the aforementioned 10 grams the body releases insulin which instructs the liver and muscles to absorb glucose from the blood. Furthermore all parts of your body which can run on glucose start doing so. The burning of fatty acids is reduced.
Beyond the bloodstream, the body can store a few hundred grams of glucose. Amounts differ with body mass and bodily condition but is generally in the order of 150 grams. The glucose storage can generally be depleted in a single day, making it a very short-term fuel.
Longer carbohydrates cannot transfer to the bloodstream and must be converted first, which can take quite some time. The delay thus incurred is actually a good thing because it makes sure that the blood isn't flooded with glucose, obviating the need for insulin release and other measures.
Proteins are broken down to amino acids in the intestine and then brought to the liver, where they are partly reassembled and partly released into the bloodstream.
Compared to glucose, a lot of proteine is available at any one time. The blood alone will contain in the order of 100 grams.
Compared to either glucose or fatty acids, amino acids also have *huge* uses. It might be stated that you ARE amino acids. They make up your DNA and mostly everything else that is interesting. I find it somewhat revolting that the body actually burns amino acids!
Continue reading about the conversion of energy.