Chapter 16- Endocrine System
Cotosol
Anti-inflammatory, puts fuel into your blood stream.
Type II Diabetes
Beta cells produce beta cells (insulin) but body does not recognize insulin.
Humoral
Body fluid/something going on in the body that triggers a hormone
Anabolism is...
Building up
Explain the physiological mechanisms of how calcitonin and parathyroid hormone regulate blood calcium levels.
Calcitonin lowers calcium levels by slowing down the rate at which calcium leaves the bones by inhibiting osteoclasts. Calcitonin also stimulates osteoblasts to deposit calcium in the bone matrix.
Androgens (androgenic steroids) Effects
Can be converted to testosterone in the circulation, likely responsible for development of female pubic hair and libido
Hydrophilic
Can go through
Hydrophobic
Cant go through
Cortisol (glucocorticoids) Target Tissues
Liver, muscle, adipose, white blood cells
Function of Melatonin
Main target tissues are the sleep-regulating centers in the reticular formation of the brainstem, where it appears to adjust the sleep phase of the sleep/wake cycle in some people.
What Gland Produces Cortisol?
Middle zona fasciculate of adrenal cortex
Neuroendocrine Organs
Modified nerves
Catecholamines (epinephrine & norepinephrine) Target Tissues
Nearly every cell in the body
Endocrine gland is made of...
Nerve tissue
Another Word for Posterior Pituitary
Neurohypophysis
Androgens (androgenic steroids) Target Tissues
Organs of the reproductive tract, brain, bone, skeletal muscle
What Gland Produces Aldosterone?
Outer zona glomerulosa of the adrenal cortex
What Makes Sex Hormones
Ovaries and testies
Insulin & glucagon comes from...
Pancreas
What Gland Produces Melatonin?
Pineal Gland
What Gland Produces Oxytocin?
Posterior Pituitary Gland
What Gland Produces the Antidiuretic Hormone?
Posterior pituitary gland
What are the complications of diabetes mellitus?
slow wound healing, altered mental status, ketoacidosis-weight loss, damage to eyes, heart, kidneys, peripheral nerves-think feet and loss of sensitivity.
Every Hormone Has...
A receptor, control center, & effector
Androgens (androgenic steroids) Stimulus for Release
ACTH
Cortisol (glucocorticoids) Stimulus for Release
ACTH
Aldosterone (mineralocorticoids) Stimulus for Release
ACTH, elevated potassium
Another Word for Anterior Pituitary
Adenohypophysis
What Gland Produces Epinephrine?
Adrenal Medulla
Mineralocorticoids=
Aldosterone= 🠕 blood volume, 🠕 blood pressure by restoring Na+, K+
What Gland Produces Prolactin?
Anterior Pituitary
What Gland Produces the Adrenocorticotropic hormone?
Anterior Pituitary
What Gland Produces the Growth Hormone?
Anterior Pituitary
What Gland Produces the Thyroid-stimulating hormone?
Anterior Pituitary
Autocrine
Cell is signaling to itself
What are Steroids Made of
Cortisol (cholesterol)
Glucocorticoids=
Cortisol= anti-inflammatory, fuel
Receptor
Detect the deviation of the variable
What are the symptoms of diabetes mellitus?
Excessive thirst, sweet smelling urine, weight loss (type 1),
Describe Endocrine Signaling. Mention glandular cell, hormone, bloodstream, target cell, and hormone receptor.
Gland makes hormone, which is secreted through the bloodstream and delivered to a specific target cell, where it binds to the target cell hormone receptor to stimulate a metabolic response.
Explain the physiological mechanisms of how glucagon and insulin regulate blood glucose levels
Glucagon stimulates the liver to breakdown glycogen into glucose (glycogenolysis) and to convert noncarbs like amino acids into glucose (gluconeogenesis).
Trophic=
Growth
Paracrine
Hormones bind to a neighboring cell
How does the hypothalamus control the anterior pituitary? How does the hypothalamus control the posterior pituitary?
Hormones sent through the hypophyseal portal veins stimulate the anterior pituitary to secrete specific hormones
Endocrine System
Hormones that circulate through the bloodstream
Thyroid Hormone
Hydrophobic
Function of Cortisol
In addition to glucose, also influences metabolism of fat and protein in order to conserve glucose for the brain.
Where are Fat Soluble Receptors?
In the nucleus (all cells are this way)
Catecholamines (epinephrine & norepinephrine) Effects
Increase rate & force of heart contractions, dilatate bronchioles, constrict blood vessels to the digestive & urinary organs and the skin, increase the metabolic rate; dilatate the pupils
Cortisol (glucocorticoids) Effects
Increases gluconeogenesis in the liver, protein breakdown in muscle, lipolysis in adipose tissue, & inhabits the inflammatory response
Function of Epinephrine
Increases heart rate, blood pressure, and metabolic rate, dilates vessels and airways, & increase blood glucose by breaking down glycogen stores.
Control Center
Increases or decreases its secretion of a particular hormone
Somatostatin
Inhibits production of growth hormone from an anterior pituitary gland
Type I Diabetes
Juvenile, beta cells (insulin) are destroyed by immune system.
What are the functions of thyroxine (T4) and triiodothyronine (T3)? What parts of the thyroid tissue are involved in synthesizing thyroid hormones? What trace element is needed to make thyroid hormones?
The T's speed up the rate at which cells release energy from carbs and determines how many calories the body must consume at rest to sustain life. This is measured as the basal metabolic rate (BMR). When there's too much T3 and T4 circulating, the hypothalamus stops secreting TRH, which in turn inhibits the pituitary from secreting TSH.
Hydrophobic Hormones
Receptors in the nucleus, crosses plasma membrane, steroid & thyroid hormones
Function of Antidiuretic hormone
Reduces the volume of water that the kidneys secrete. Stimulates water retention (or decreases urine output)
Aldosterone (mineralocorticoids)
Regulates blood pressure, increases ion loss in the urine
Thyroid Gland
Regulates heat
Function of Aldosterone
Regulates the concentration of mineral electrolytes like Na+ (sodium) and K+ (potassium) by telling the kidneys to save sodium ions and secrete potassium ions.
Hydrophilic hormones uses...
Second messenger
Tropic=
Signaling
What is the Physiological action of a thyroid hormone?
Similar to steroid hormones, but there may be a specific mechanism that helps them to move across the cell membrane. Increase cellular metabolism (activity of cells)
How are Hormones Chemically Classified?
Steroid & non steroid
What is the Physiological Action of a Steroid Hormone?
Steroid hormones crosses the cell membrane and combines with a protein receptor (in nucleus). The hormone-receptor complex then activates the making of mRNA molecules. The mRNA leaves the nucleus to enter the cytoplasm. Translation of mRNA leads to the synthesis of encoded proteins that are integral to the metabolic response of the cell.
Function of Prolactin
Stimulates milk production in mammary glands
Function of Growth hormone
Stimulates protein synthesis and cell growth throughout the body
Function of Adrenocorticotropic hormone
Stimulates release of hormones such as cortisol and aldosterone from the adrenal cortex
Function of Thyroid-stimulating hormone
Stimulates thyroid gland
Function of Oxytocin
Stimulates uterine smooth muscle contraction; stimulates myoepithelial cells in mammary glands.
Catecholamines (epinephrine & norepinephrine) Stimulus for Release
Stimulation from preganglionic sympathetic neurons ACTH
How does a negative feedback mechanism regulate the endocrine system? Use thyroid hormones and cortisol regulation as examples.
T3 and T4 are secreted from the thyroid in response to TSH being secreted by the pituitary gland. The T's speed up the rate at which cells release energy from carbs and determines how many calories the body must consume at rest to sustain life. This is measured as the basal metabolic rate (BMR). When there's too much T3 and T4 circulating, the hypothalamus stops secreting TRH, which in turn inhibits the pituitary from secreting TSH. As Cortisol rises, a few things happen: proteins are inhibited, fatty acids are released and glucose formation is increased. When there's too much Cortisol, this signals the hypothalamus to stop secreting CRH which tells the Ant Pituitary to stop secreting ACTH to the Adrenal cortex.
What is the physiological action of a nonsteroid (amine, peptide or protein) hormone? What are the roles of second messengers?
They bind with a receptor 'binding site' located on the cell membrane. This combination sets off a series of events beginning with the activation of a G protein which turns on the adenylate cyclase molecules located within the cell membrane. The adenylate cyclase converts ATP in Cyclic Amp or cAMP (the second messenger). The Cyclic AMP activates protein kinases, which then activate protein substrates in the cell that change metabolic processes. The roles of second messengers are to amplify the cellular response (cascade). Several second messengers can be activated by just a few hormone-receptor complexes.
T3 & T4 are...
Thyroid hormones
Calcitonin
Tones down [Ca2+]; parafollicular cells of thyroid gland
Effector
Triggers a response in its target cells that moves conditions toward the normal range
Aldosterone (mineralocorticoids) Target Tissues
Tubules of the kidneys
PTH
[Ca2+]; parathyroid gland, chief cells
What Makes up Metabolism?
anabolism + catabolism
