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  2. Benedict's reagent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benedict's_reagent

    Generally, Benedict's test detects the presence of aldehyde groups, alpha-hydroxy-ketones, and hemiacetals, including those that occur in certain ketoses. In example, although the ketose fructose is not strictly a reducing sugar, it is an alpha-hydroxy-ketone which results to a positive test because the base component of Benedict converts it ...

  3. Lacto-N-tetraose - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lacto-N-tetraose

    This characteristic of reducing sugars is seen through a positive Benedict's Test. Lactose- N -tetraose has the oligosaccharide nomenclature β- D -galactosyl-(1→3)- N -acetyl-β- D -glucosaminyl-(1→3)-β- D -galactosyl-(1→4)- D -glucose, and consists of lactose with an additional lactose- N -biose disaccharide at the non-reducing end.

  4. Reducing sugar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reducing_sugar

    Reducing disaccharides like lactose and maltose have only one of their two anomeric carbons involved in the glycosidic bond, while the other is free and can convert to an open-chain form with an aldehyde group. The aldehyde functional group allows the sugar to act as a reducing agent, for example, in the Tollens' test or Benedict's test.

  5. Lactose intolerance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lactose_intolerance

    In a hydrogen breath test, the most accurate lactose intolerance test, after an overnight fast, 25 grams of lactose (in a solution with water) are swallowed. If the lactose cannot be digested, enteric bacteria metabolize it and produce hydrogen, which, along with methane, if produced, can be detected on the patient's breath by a clinical gas ...

  6. Sucrase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sucrase

    Sucrose is a non-reducing sugar, so will not test positive with Benedict's solution. To test for sucrose, the sample is treated with sucrase. The sucrose is hydrolysed into glucose and fructose, with glucose being a reducing sugar, which in turn tests positive with Benedict's solution. [citation needed].

  7. Alfred Wöhlk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfred_Wöhlk

    Since its discovery in 1904 until the 1960s, the Wöhlk test has mainly been used to detect the reducing disaccharide lactose in urine in medical laboratories. Although there were already a number of wet-chemical detection methods to identify sugars, such as the Fehling or Benedict test , those analyses could only differentiate between reducing ...

  8. Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI's body lies in state at Vatican - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/thousands-line-viewing...

    The body of late Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI laid out in state inside St. Peter's Basilica at The Vatican, Monday, Jan. 2, 2023. Benedict XVI, the German theologian who will be remembered as the ...

  9. Lactic acid fermentation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lactic_acid_fermentation

    The process then repeats, starting with another glucose molecule. Lactic acid fermentation is a metabolic process by which glucose or other six-carbon sugars (also, disaccharides of six-carbon sugars, e.g. sucrose or lactose) are converted into cellular energy and the metabolite lactate, which is lactic acid in solution