Endocrinology- anterior and posterior pituitary glands Flashcards
Pituitary gland also known as? Lies where in the brain? Connected to hypothalamus via what? Anterior sometimes called what? Posterior lobe sometimes called?
Hypophysis In a pocket of the sphenoid bone at base of the brain just below hypothalamus Infundibulum/ pituitary stalk Adenohypophysis Neurohypophysis
What does the hypothalamus do via the hypothalamus-hypophyseal portal vessels? Stimulated to release these by what?
Secrete hypophysiotropic hormones which reach the anterior pituitary- further stimulate anterior to release 6 hormones
CNS receptors that detect outside environment
Action potentials in hypothalamus neurones causes to do what?
Secrete hormones via exocytosis similar to other neurones releasing NTs
Hypophysiotropic hormones released from hypothalamus to anterior pituitary?
Corticotropin-releasing hormone(CRH) Growth-hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) Somatostatin (SST) Thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) Gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) Dopamine
CRH stimulates release of what from anterior?
GHRH stimulates release of what? Somatostatin inhibits the release of what?
TRH stimulates release of what? GnRH stimulates the release of what? Dopamine inhibits the release of what?
Adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) Growth hormone (GH) GHRH TSH LH and FSH Prolactin
What doesn’t the anterior pituitary have? Receives blood from where? Contains how many types of hormone producing cell and produces how many hormones?
Arterial blood supply and neural connections to the hypothalamus
Hypothalamo-hypophyseal portal vessels
5 types of hormone producing cell and produces 6 hormones
Benefit of 3 step sequence of hypothalamus–anterior pituitary– hormone from other endocrine gland acting on target cells?
Permit variety of hormonal feedback and allow amplification of small number of hypothalamic neurones–> large peripheral hormonal signal
6 peptide hormones released from anterior pituitary? Mnemonic to remember?
FSH- produced in gonadotrophs LH- in gonadotrophs ACTH- in corticotrophs TSH- in thyrotrophs Prolactin- in lactotrophs GH- in somatotropin FLATPIG- ignore I
FSH and LH do what? GH does what? ACTH does what? TSH does what? Prolactin does what?
Stimulate germ cell development and release of hormone (females= estradiol and progesterone, males= testosterone)
Growth and protein synthesis
Stimulates adrenal cortex to secrete cortisol
Stimulates thyroid to secrete T3 and T4–> increased metabolism
Stimulates breasts to produce milk and breast development
TRH stimulates what….?
TSH from anterior–> T3 and T4 from thyroid–> increased metabolism
GnRH stimulates what….?
LH and FSH–> gonads produce oestrogen, progesterone and testosterone
GHRH stimulates what…?
GH from anterior–> growth and protein synthesis
Somatostatin does what?
Inhibits GH–> less growth and protein synthesis
CRH stimulates what…?
ACTH release–> increase cortisol production in adrenal cortex from zona fasiculata
Dopamine stimulates what….?
Inhibits prolactin—> inhibits growth and milk production