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Chromatography
Electrochemistry
Spectrophotometry
Carbohydrates
Diabetes
100
This is also known as the liquid solid chromatography.
What is adsorption chromatography?
100
This involves separation of protein on the basis of charge and molecular size.
What is polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis?
100
This is the most common source of light for work in the visible and near-infrared region.
What is incandescent tungsten?
100
This is the chaining of 2 to 10 sugar units.
What is oligosaccharide?
100
This type is characterized by peripheral resistance to insulin.
What is Type II Diabetes Mellitus?
200
This is also referred to as liquid-liquid chromatography.
What is Partition Chromatography?
200
This is the migration of charged particles in an electric field.
What is electrophoresis?
200
This describes the relationship between absorption of light by a solution and the concentration.
What is Beer's Law?
200
This is the primary source of energy in humans.
What is glucose?
200
This is the most common detected glycosylated hemoglobin.
What is HbA1c?
300
This is a variation of liquid-solid chromatography, used to separate solute molecules on basis of size and shape.
What is steric exclusion?
300
This refers to the migration of small ions.
What is iontophoresis?
300
This is the separation of light into component wavelengths.
What is diffraction?
300
This is the detour of glucose-6-phosphate from the glycolytic pathway.
What is hexose monophosphat shunt?
300
This is produced by the delta cells of the islet of Langerhans in pancreas.
What is somatostatin?
400
This involves separation by means of magnitude and charge of ionic species.
What is Ion-exchange Chromatography?
400
This is similar to pH glass electrodes but are designed to detect specific gases.
What are gas electrodes?
400
This absorbs radiant energy by a reverse-biased pn-junction diode.
What is photodiode?
400
This is the type of bond between two sugar units.
What is glycosidic bond?
400
This has no known etiology and strongly inherited.
What is idiopathic type 1 diabetes?
500
This uses pressure for fast separations, controlled temperature, in-line detectors, and gradient elution techniques.
What is High Performance Liquid Chromatography?
500
This is the movement of buffer ions and solvent relative to the fixed support.
What is electroendosmosis?
500
This is a fraction of a specific wavelength of light absorbed by a given type of molecule.
What is molar absorptivity?
500
This is the enzyme present in saliva that helps in digestion.
What is salivary amylase?
500
This is a rare form of diabetes that is inherited in an autosomal dominant fashion.
What is Maturity Onset Diabetes of the Young?