Yes.
The universal way is through the body's own processes. Sugar in the intestines is converted into alcohol and carbon dioxide (a gas). This occurs in all human bodies, including those of alcohol abstainers. The most common way of increasing the body's own "home made" supply, is through is drinking alcoholic beverages. People sometimes inhale alcohol vapors or take alcohol enemas. When alcohol is in the stomach and intestines it goes out through the lining into the bloodstream
Most carbohydrates are either a common sugar or a long chain of sugars linked together. The body's digestive system works to break the chains apart into simple sugars so the body can absorb them. Thus, most carbohydrates can turn into sugar.
i has this speacail stuff that make it turn in to sugar its in there body.
No, salt does not turn into sugar in the body. They are two different compounds with different chemical structures and functions in the body. Salt is primarily composed of sodium and chloride ions, while sugar is a carbohydrate that provides energy when broken down by the body.
No, because not all white foods contain sugar so how could they turn into sugar if they contain none.
Yes because Starch is carbs. Carbs turn to sugar in the body to be used for energy. Once this happens, Your blood sugar will raise. So starch and sugar areeee the same thing. They're just broken down differently.
alcohol
No, it does stimulate the release of insulin, which burns available sugars in the body.
Carbs turn into sugar and that is what your body runs on for energy then it stores the leftover sugar and turns into fat, so if u take carbs out of your diet your body needs something else to run on. So it will start burning your body fat and turn it into energy.
It's not as much about the sugar itself - it's about how much of it you eat. Sugar contains a lot of energy that your body can use, but if you don't use it up your body will turn it into fat and store it instead.
Alcohol does not turn into urine.