STRUCTURAL AND FUNCTIONAL ORGANIZATION OF THE ENDOCRINE SYSTEM Flashcards
Major glands of the Endocrine system:
(1) Hypothalamus
(2) Pituitary
(3) Thyroid
(4) Parathyroid
(5) Pancreas
(6) Adrenals
(7) Ovaries and testes
(8) Pineal gland
What glands secrete hormones to regulate many bodily functions, including growth and metabolism?
Major glands of the Endocrine system
This defines what?
A specific cell with specific receptors that will respond to specific hormones
Target Cell
A target cell will have _____ to ________ receptors for a particular hormone.
2,000 to 100,000
Hormones are either ________-soluble or ______-soluble.
lipid or water
Lipid Soluble or Water soluble?
a) Steroid hormones
(b) Thyroid hormones
(c) Nitric Oxide
Lipid
Lipid Soluble or Water soluble?
Amino Acids
1) Short-chain; Antidiuretic hormone
2) Long-chain; Insulin
Water Soluble
Hormones influence their target cells by chemically binding to what?
specific protein receptors
__________ is known as the master switchboard because it’s the part of the brain that controls the endocrine system. Also acts as the major link between the endocrine system and the nervous system.
The hypothalamus
The_________, which hangs by a thin stalk from the hypothalamus, is called the master gland of the body because it regulates the activity of the endocrine glands.
pituitary gland
Hypothalamus secretes a total of how many hormones?
nine
pituitary gland secretes how many hormones?
seven
what is the stalk like structure that, attaches the pituitary gland to the hypothalamus?
the infundibulum
Within the infundibulum, blood vessels termed ___________ connect capillaries in the hypothalamus to capillaries in the anterior pituitary and carries hormones secreted by the hypothalamus to the anterior pituitary.
hypophyseal portal veins
Gonadotropin-releasing hormone – stimulates…
FSH & LH
Growth hormone-releasing hormone – stimulates
HGH & IGF
Growth hormone-inhibiting hormone does what?
inhibits HGH & IGF
Thyroid-releasing hormone does what?
stimulates TSH
Prolactin-releasing hormone does what?
stimulates PRL
Prolactin-inhibiting hormone does what?
inhibits PR
Corticotropin-releasing hormone does what?
stimulates ACTH
Hypothalamus secretes what hormones?
a. Gonadotropin-releasing hormone
b. Growth hormone-releasing hormone
c. Growth hormone-inhibiting hormone
d. Thyroid-releasing hormone
e. Prolactin-releasing hormone
f. Prolactin-inhibiting hormone
g. Corticotropin-releasing hormone
The pituitary gland it about the size of a small grape and has two lobes called what?
1) Anterior pituitary
2) Posterior pituitary
Both lobes of the pituitary rest in the _______, a cup shaped depression in the sphenoid bone.
hypophyseal fossa
What is a a hormone that stimulates an endocrine gland to grow and
secrete its hormones.
Tropic Hormones
Hormones of the Anterior pituitary:
- Human Growth Hormone (hGH)
- Thyroid-Stimulating Hormone (TSH)
- Follicle-Stimulation Hormone (FSH)
- Luteinizing Hormone (LH)
- Prolactin (PRL)
- Adrenocorticotropic Hormone (ACTH)
- Melanocyte-Stimulating Hormone (MSH)
What Hormone?
-Promote synthesis and secretion of Insulinlike Growth Factors (IGFs).
-Maintains blood concentration by means of a negative feedback loop
Human Growth Hormone (hGH)
________ are proteins secreted mainly by cells in the liver, but is also secreted by cells in the skeletal muscles, cartilage, bones, and other tissues in response to stimulation of hGH.
–Stimulate protein synthesis, help maintain muscle and bone mass, and promote healing of injury and tissue repair.
–Enhance breakdown of triglycerides, which release fatty acid into the blood, and breakdown of liver glycogen, which releases glucose into the blood.
Insulinlike growth Factors
What Two hypothalamic hormones control secretion of hGH.
1) _____ – Low blood glucose levels
2) _____ – Above normal blood glucose levels
1) Growth Hormone-Releasing Hormone (GHRH) – Low blood glucose levels
2) Growth Hormone- Inhibiting Hormone (GHIH) – Above normal blood glucose levels
What hormone?
Stimulates the synthesis and secretion of thyroid hormones by the thyroid gland.
Thyroid-Stimulating Hormone (TSH)