Hypothalamus and pituitary lecture Flashcards

1
Q

What is the coordinating center of the endocrine system

A

hypothalamus

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2
Q

Where is the pituitary gland

A

sella tursica in the sphenoid bone

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3
Q

another name for anterior pituitary

A

adenohypophysis

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4
Q

what is the anterior pituitary

A

highly vascularized
regulates thyroid, adrenal, mammary glands
regulated GH, gonads, melanocytes

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5
Q

adrenal glands- major

A

thyroid, adrenals, gonads

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6
Q

anterior pituitary cell types

A

somatotrops (30-40%) most abundant, secretes GH
Croticotropes (20%) secretes ACTH
Thyrotropes (5%) secretes TSH
Gonadotropes (5%) secretes LH and FSH
Lactrotropes (5%) secretes prolactin

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7
Q

The posterior pituitary is aka

A

neurohypophysis
produces adh and oxytocin

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8
Q

where is blood supplied from when it goes to the hypothalamus, AP, and PP

A

hypothalamus- superior hypophyseal artery
AP- long portal vessels
PP- inferior hypophyseal artery

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9
Q

names and function of the nuclei in the hypothalamus

A

paraventricular- oxytocin (pitocin)
supraoptic nucleus- ADH

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10
Q

what is the master gland

A

pituitary gland

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11
Q

anterior pituitary secretes:

A

FLAT PG
fsh
lh
acth
thyroid/ tsh
prolactin
gh

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12
Q

stimulus for adh release- what is activated?

A

high plasma osmolarity >290 activate
osmoreceptor in hypothalamus
decreased ecf volume
increased na, low bp, at2, nicotine, pain, ppv,

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13
Q

DI

A

adh deficiency
neurogenic (common) or nephrogenic

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14
Q

what can cause nephrogenic di

A

ckd
lithium toxicity
hypercalcemia
hypokalemia
drugs (tubulointerstitial disease)
genetics

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15
Q

anesthesia and hypernatremia

A

increased mac
decreased ecf requires lower iv doses
postpone if over 150
lethargy, hyperreflexia, restlessness

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16
Q

siadh

A

water
adh overload
restrict fluids, demeclocycline

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17
Q

anesthesia and hyponatremia (stop level, mac, symptoms, tx)

A

cancel if below 130
<130 decrease in mac
agitation, confusion, somnolence
3% saline, lasix

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18
Q

risk factors for central pontine myelinolysis

A

sodium <120 for 48 hours
aggressive iv fluid therapy with 3%
development of hypernatremia during treatment
monitor q1h

19
Q

where is oxytocin secreted from

A

paraventricular nucleus of posterior pituitary

20
Q

what is the action of oxytocin

A

contract uterus during labor- used after labor to stop blood loss after birth
contract lactating breast

21
Q

risks of oxytocin

A

fetal distress due to hyperstimulation
uterine tetany
maternal water intoxication
rapid infusion can cause htn, tachy, nv, seizures

22
Q

how do pituitary tumors present

A

eye issues
bitemporal hemianopsia

23
Q

excess GH presentation

A

acromegaly, difficult mask and intubation

24
Q

excess tsh presentation

A

hyperthyroid, tachy, weight loss

25
Q

acth excess presentaiton

A

cushings, difficult airway and access

26
Q

treatment for panhypopituitarism

A

cortisol
t4
ddavp

27
Q

pituitary surgery approach

A

most done with transphenoidal approach
some may require craniotomy

28
Q

risks (and tx) of pituitary surgery

A

di
suspect with urine spec gravity <1.005
treat with ddavp 2mcg iv or sq and volume

29
Q

anesthetic considerations for pituitary surgery

A

normotensive and normocapneic
hypocapnea will lower icp
deep extubate
oral rae

30
Q

acromegaly presentation

A

large tongue, large epiglottis, enlarged mandible, distorted anatomy
subglottic narrowing, vocal cord enlargement
downszie ett
osa, htn, cmp, lvh common
skeletal overgrowth
glucose intolerance
entrapment nueropathys

31
Q

most common cause of di

A

pituitary surgery
but also
tbi
sah

32
Q

ddavp dose for di

A

sc- 0.5-2mcg bid
nasal- 5-40 mcg qd

33
Q

treatment for siadh

A

fluid restriction
3%
demeclocycline

34
Q

most common cause of siadh

A

tbi - most
small cell lung carcinoma
carbamazepine

35
Q

another name for growth hormone

A

somatotropin

36
Q

main cause of acromegaly

A

pituitary adenoma

37
Q

acromegaly vs gigantism

A

acromegaly- after adolescence
gigantism- before puberty

38
Q

t3 vs t4

A

t3- more potent, shorter half life, less protein bound
t4- prohormone, less potent, more concentrations in the blood

39
Q

half life of t3 and t4

A

t3- 1 day
t4- 7 days

40
Q

acromegaly considerations

A

distorted facial features- difficult mask ventilation
Large tongue, teeth, epiglottis- difficult laryngoscopy
subglottic narrow and vocal cord enlargement- use smaller tube
turbinate enlargements- risk of epistaxis, avoid nasal intubation if possible
osa common
htn, cad, rhythm disturbance
glucose intolerance
sm weakness
entrapment neuropathy- ulnar

41
Q

what do patients with hyperparathyroid present with often?

A

increased PTH and hypophosphatemia

42
Q

clinical feature of primary hyperparathyroidism

A

shortened qt from hypercalemia
pathological fx from bone resportion

43
Q

hypocalcemia can cause

A

laryngospams
myocardial depression

44
Q
A