Endocrine System (W9) Flashcards

1
Q

Hormones have ___ effect on target tissues

A

Specific

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2
Q

Endocrine glands are

A

Ductless

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3
Q

Insulin is produced by

A

Beta cells

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4
Q

Insulin works to lower CBG by

A

Moving glucose into the cell for energy

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5
Q

Insulin helps absorb

A

Amino acids and fatty acids

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6
Q

Insulin convert glycogen to the liver for

A

Later use

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7
Q

Glucagon is produced/secreted by the

A

Alpha cells

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8
Q

How does glucagon work to increase CBG

A

By breaking down glycogen to glucose

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9
Q

What does somatostatin do

A

Works to lower insulin/glucagon when hormone levels are too high

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10
Q

In an adult the normal CBG level is

A

4-6mmol

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11
Q

In a pediatric the normal CBG level is

A

3-6mmol

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12
Q

In the first 24hrs of life what is a normal CBG

A

1.5-3mmol

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13
Q

What may cause high CBG

A

Trauma, post seizure, fever, immediately after a meal, infection

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14
Q

What does the thyroid do

A

Regulates tissue/body metabolism/development

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15
Q

What gland regulates the release of thyroid hormones

A

Pituitary gland

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16
Q

Very fast acting insulin

A

lispro // humulog

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17
Q

VERY FAST ACTING INSULIN: onset ___, peak ___, duration ___

A

0.5-1h // 2-3h // 8-12h

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18
Q

Regular fast acting insulin

A

humulin R // novolin R

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19
Q

FAST ACTING INSULIN: peak ___, duration ___

A

2-5h // 5-8h

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20
Q

Intermediate acting insulin

A

humulin R // novolin R // lente

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21
Q

INTERMEDIATE ACTING INSULIN: onest ___, peak ___, duration ___

A

1-1.5h // 4-12h // 16-24h

22
Q

Long acting insulin

A

Zinc suspension

23
Q

LONG ACTING INSULIN: onset ___, peak ___, duration ___

A

4-8h // 16-18h // <23h

24
Q

If pt is hyperglycemic, consider medications to

A

Encourage the pancreas to produce more insulin which will lower CBG

25
Most common first medication for T2DM
Biguanides: metformin (glucophage)
26
How do bigaunides (metformin; glucophage) work in the body
Inhibits glycogen breakdown to glucose, lowers insulin levels, makes cells more sensitive to insulin
27
Addison’s disease can be
Autoimmune, infectious, neoplastic, traumatic, or vascular
28
Addison’s disease is a destruction of what
The adrenal cortex
29
S/S of Addison’s disease
Chronic fatigue, weight loss, anemia, hyperpigmentation, decreased concentration
30
What is the prehospital tx for pts w adrenal failure/crisis
Hydrocortisone
31
How is hydrocortisone administered
M/IV, 2mg/kg (max sin. dose 100mg), only one dose
32
To give hydrocortisone, paramedics must
Be presented with a vial of it AND pt has age-related hypoglycemia/tension/tachycardia // GI S/S // syncope // <38degrees of hx of fever // altered LOA //
33
An excessive amount of cortisol can be caused by
Prolonged exposure to elevated levels of glucocorticoids, increased Na+ retention (increasing blood volume) = together HTN
34
Pathologies cushings syndrome can cause
Altered fat management (hypercholesteremia), causing atherosclerosis, increased risk of diabetes and infection
35
What hormones are lacking in Addison’s disease
Glucocorticoids (cortisol) and mineralcorticoids (ALD)
36
S/S of Cushing’s syndrome
Moon face, buffalo hump, easy bruising, purple striae, increased facial hair, HTN, osteoporosis, glucose intolerance, psychosis
37
Osteoporosis in Cushing’s syndrome is due to what
The increased glucocorticoids increasing bone reabsorption and decreasing bone formation, making brittle bones
38
What does ALD (produced and secreted by adrenal glands) do
Signals kidney to excrete less Na+ and more K+ (antidiuretic)
39
Hyperaldosteronism causes what
HTN, hypokalemia, muscle spasm/temporary paralysis
40
What causes a goiter (enlarged thyroid gland)
Deficiency in thyroid hormone synthesis/intake = increase in TSH production
41
What problems can a goiter pose
Compression of the trachea, larynx, superior and inferior laryngeal nerve, esophagus
42
Graves’ disease is the generation of antibodies producing what
Excess thyroid hormones
43
Why are excess thyroid hormones produced in Graves’ disease
Overstimulation of thyroid tissue creating organ function changes
44
What is the pathology behind hyperthyroidism
Excessive thyroid hormone synthesis, accelerated metabolism to peripheral tissues = increased CO at rest = less muscle and function. Hyper-response of beta-adrenergic receptors (ie increased catecholamine sensitivity)
45
What is a thyroid crisis
Unbound thyroid hormone, causing nervousness/tremors, heat intolerance, weight loss with an appetite, confusion, dyspnea, palpitations, muscle weakness
46
A thyroid storm is life-threatening due to hyperthyroidism causing
Fever above 40, confusion—>delirium—>seizures—>coma
47
What can cause hypothyroidism
Low metabolic state due to low TH in the blood
48
What can hypothyroidism cause
Lethargy, cold intolerance, dry/coarse skin, facial/extremity swelling, impaired memory, mild weight gain w/o appetite
49
Hashimoto’s thyroiditis is the most common cause of what
Hypothyroidism
50
S/S of myxedema coma
Altered LOA, hypothermia, HoTN, bradycardia/pnea, electrolyte imbalance, delusions/psychosis