Lecture 1 - Introduction to disorders of the endocrine system - Pituitary and Thyroid Flashcards

1
Q

Define hypo-secretion and give an example of a condition

A

Not enough secretion of the hormone
Problems with the endocrine gland
e.g. type 1 diabetes

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2
Q

Define hyper-secretion and give and example of a condition

A

Too much hormone is being secreted
Not cancerous a benign tumour - proliferation and overgrowth of the gland more hormone-producing material therefore you get more hormone secreted
e.g. pancreatic endocrine tumour

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3
Q

Define hypo-responsive and give and example of a condition

A

e.g. insulin resistant type 2 diabetes
Insulin receptors can’t signal effectively even though there is enough insulin in the body

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4
Q

Define hyper-responsive and give an example of a condition

A

TSH receptor constitutive activation - hyperthyroidism
Inappropriate activation of those hormones which leads to excess production of thyroid hormone

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5
Q

Define acromegaly

A

Caused by excessive production of growth hormone
common in Middle Ages
can result in premature death
slow onset
bony features tend to be overgrown
symptoms:
abnormal growth of hands and feet

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6
Q

What does excessive growth hormone cause?

A

Hypersecretion
Gigantism - early life pituitary tumour - not cancerous
Acromegaly - pituitary tumour adolescence (after adolescence)

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7
Q

What do growth hormone deficit cause?

A

Dwarfism:
- general anterior pituitary dysfunction
- specific GH deficit
- normal GH hereditary somatomedin deficit

Accelerated ageing - loss of growth hormone after adolescence - decreased protein synthesis

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8
Q

Explain the treatment of acromegaly

A

Surgical removal of tumour
drug therapy

Octreotide and Lanreotide - can switch off GH production
Pegvisomant - GH receptor antagonist
Bromocriptine - dopamine agonist
Radiation therapy - selectively targets the overgrowth

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9
Q

What is prolactinoma?

A

Hyperprolactinemia
Bengin tumours
Overproduction of the milk hormone

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10
Q

Symptoms of prolactinoma

A

Galactorrhoea - leaky breasts
Amenorrhoea - females absence of periods
Hypogondism- diminished production of sex hormones
Erectile dysfunction
Vision loss

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11
Q

Treatment for prolactinoma

A

Prolactin inhibiting factor (PIF) is dopamine
Dopamine acts at D2 receptors in the pituitary gland to inhibit prolactin release
Cabergoline and bromocriptine are dopamine agonists that inhibit prolactin production and can reduce the size of a prolactinoma

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12
Q

What drug could promote excess production of prolactin ?

A

Antipsychotics that are D2 receptor antagonists can cause hyperprolactinaemia because blocking the inhibition can lead to excess prolactin

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13
Q

Define hypopituitarism

A

Results from a deficiency in one or more pituitary hormones - potentially very serious means your adrenal, pituitary and sex hormones are not regulated

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14
Q

Define panhypopituitarism

A

A deficiency in all anterior pituitary hormones

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15
Q

Causes of hypopituitarism

A

Traumatic, infective, vascular, autoimmune functional

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16
Q

Treatment of hypopituitarism

A

Recombinant therapy with the appropriate hormones
recombinant GH (pituitary dwarfism)
levothyroxine (2nd-degree hypothyroidism)

17
Q

What does the thyroid do?

A

Responsible for producing thyroxine T4 which is converted in the periphery to T3.
T3 is what gets inside cells and produces the physiological effects of thyroid hormone which are on basal metabolic rate and cellular metabolism

18
Q

What regulates the thyroid hormone?

A

Hypothalamus produces thyrotrophin-releasing hormone which acts on the pituitary
The thyroid hormone negatively regulates thyroid stimulating hormone at the level of the pituitary and also negatively regulates the hypothalamus

19
Q

What does the thyroid stimulating hormone act on?

A

Acts on the thyroid to produce the thyroid hormones which circulate in the blood to all the peripheral tissues to bring about the tissue actions