Insulin.
Glucagon is the hormone that raises blood glucose levels.
ADH
insulin
The hormone Insulin regulates the body's glucose levels.
Insulin is a peptide hormone released by the pancreas when glucose levels in the blood rise.
There are several hormone which serve to raise blood glucose levels. Some examples include cortisol, epinephrine, glucagon, and growth hormone.
insulin
When blood glucose levels drop, the pancreas releases the hormone glucagon, which signals the liver to release glucose into the bloodstream.
Glucagon is catabolic and increases blood glucose levels, insulin is anabolic decreases blood glucose levels.
There are two hormones that regulate blood glucose levels. One is insulin. This horemone "carries" glucose into the cell. No glucose and the cell starves and the glucose levels get higher in the blood. The second hormone takes glucose out of liver storage and increases the glucose in the blood. These two are a feedback mechanism that keeps the levels in a normal range.
decrease of blood glucose levels
Insulin