glucose tolerance curve - meaning and definition. What is glucose tolerance curve
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What (who) is glucose tolerance curve - definition

TYPE OF MEDICAL TEST
OGTT; Oral glucose tolerance test; Glucose Tolerance Test; Intravenous glucose challenge test; IVGCT; Glucose challenge test; Oral glucose tolerence test

Glucose tolerance test         
The glucose tolerance test (GTT, not to be confused with GGT test) is a medical test in which glucose is given and blood samples taken afterward to determine how quickly it is cleared from the blood. The test is usually used to test for diabetes, insulin resistance, impaired beta cell function, and sometimes reactive hypoglycemia and acromegaly, or rarer disorders of carbohydrate metabolism.
Drug tolerance         
PHARMACOLOGICAL CONCEPT DESCRIBING SUBJECTS' REDUCED REACTION TO A DRUG FOLLOWING ITS REPEATED USE
Physiological tolerance; Tolerance (pharmacology)
Drug tolerance or drug insensitivity is a pharmacological concept describing subjects' reduced reaction to a drug following its repeated use. Increasing its dosage may re-amplify the drug's effects; however, this may accelerate tolerance, further reducing the drug's effects.
zero tolerance         
PUNISHMENT POLICY WITH NO DISCRETION FOR LENIANCY
Zero-tolerance policy; Zero tolerance policy; Zero-tolerance; Zero Tolerance; Zero Tolerance drug policy; No-tolerance policy; Criticism of zero-tolerance policing; Zero-tolerance approach
¦ noun strict enforcement of the law regarding any form of antisocial behaviour.

Wikipedia

Glucose tolerance test

The glucose tolerance test (GTT, not to be confused with GGT test) is a medical test in which glucose is given and blood samples taken afterward to determine how quickly it is cleared from the blood. The test is usually used to test for diabetes, insulin resistance, impaired beta cell function, and sometimes reactive hypoglycemia and acromegaly, or rarer disorders of carbohydrate metabolism. In the most commonly performed version of the test, an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT), a standard dose of glucose is ingested by mouth and blood levels are checked two hours later. Many variations of the GTT have been devised over the years for various purposes, with different standard doses of glucose, different routes of administration, different intervals and durations of sampling, and various substances measured in addition to blood glucose.