Answer:
Limit (or check if you are looking at the box).
Explanation:
I hope this answered your question.
If this is a true or false question, the answer would be true. There are reasons why an insurance needs to be verify as to know the details of the patient especially the current ones and if the patient is covered with the insurance. Information like the name, date of birth,current address and insurance information with the card are all vital.
The correct option is B.
Vitamin B12 are a set of water soluble related substances, which are very important for the proper functioning of some body enzymes and they are usually found together in the same food. Foods that are rich in Vitamin B12 include:meat, fish, poultry, egg and dairy. Some people who are vegetarians and who do not eat these kind of food will benefit greatly from taking vitamin B12 supplement.
Explanation:
When the stomach digests food, the carbohydrate (sugars and starches) in the food breaks down into another type of sugar, called glucose. The stomach and small intestines absorb the glucose and then release it into the bloodstream.
Now if i'm going to be honest if you mean how long as in time wise it takes for your body to break down the glucose and for it to end up in your mitochondria, I do not know but ill explain the process and ill bold key words from start to end where the glucose goes.
The breakdown processes must act on food taken in from outside, but not on the macromolecules inside our own cells. First the enzymatic breakdown of food molecules is therefore digestion, which occurs either in our intestine outside cells, or in a specialized organelle within cells, the lysosome. (A membrane that surrounds the lysosome keeps its digestive enzymes separated from the cytosol) In either case, the large polymeric molecules in food are broken down during digestion into their monomer subunits, as proteins into amino acids, polysaccharides into sugars, and fats into fatty acids and glycerol. Through the action of enzymes. After digestion, the small organic molecules derived from food enter the cytosol of the cell, where their gradual oxidation begins. Oxidation occurs in two further stages of cellular catabolism. Then in the cytosol and ends in the major energy being converted organelle, the mitochondrion, in the end it is entirely confined to the mitochondrion.