Chapters 12-14 Flashcards

1
Q

What are the three phases of energy metabolism?

A

Cephalic, absorptive and fasting.

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2
Q

What is insulin’s role in energy metabolism?

A

Released by pancreas in cepalic and absorptive phases. Promotes: glucose as primary energy source, conversion of bloodborne fuels, energy storage.

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3
Q

What is the cephalic phase?

A

Prep phase, active at smell/thought of food, ends when absorption begins. Insulin high, glucagon low.

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4
Q

What is the absorptive phase?

A

Energy absorbed is meeting immediate energy needs. Insulin high, glucagon low.

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5
Q

What is the fasting phase?

A

Begins when unstored energy from previous meal has been used up, body is now using energy from its reserves. Glucagon high, insulin low.

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6
Q

What is the sexually dimorphic nucleus?

A

The medial precipice area of the hypothalamus that is larger in males.

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7
Q

What is melatonin?

A

Hormone made in pineal gland, high levels in darkness/sleep

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8
Q

What is an iatrogenic disorder?

A

Problem created by physician.

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9
Q

What are the three main factors of difference in taste preference?

A

Age (receptor count), genes (bitter gene), and culture.

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10
Q

What is a nuclei?

A

A cluster of neurons

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11
Q

What is the mammillary body?

A

Nuclei that signals time to eat, time to stop eating

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12
Q

What is the gustory Cortex responsible for?

A

Taste

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13
Q

What is the somatosensory cortex responsible for?

A

Texture, sight, sound of food.

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14
Q

What is the orbital frontal cortex responsible for?

A

Right hemisphere equals pleasant taste, left hemisphere equals unpleasant taste

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15
Q

In relation to eating, higher levels of serotonin is related to:

A

Feeling satisfied and full, better mood.

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16
Q

What are the three factors of beginning and ending eating?

A

Brain and digestive system, classical conditioning, cognitive factors.

17
Q

How does the brain and digestive system contribute to beginning and ending eating?

A

Satiety signals, glucose and insulin levels, feast and famine.

18
Q

What are the cognitive factors of beginning and ending eating?

A

Prefrontal Cortex: positive incentive drive, sensory specific satiety, emotional motivation.

19
Q

What is sensory specific satiety?

A

Same basic taste = less pleasure, stop eating sooner.

20
Q

What is obesity?

A

BMI at dangerous level, #1 cause of type 2 diabetes, factor of early puberty.

21
Q

When/why did the obesity epidemic begin?

A

1980’s, sedentary lifestyle, convenient food, portion sizes, HF corn syrup.

22
Q

What are the 3 causes of bulimia and anorexia?

A

Culture, family and biology.

23
Q

What are the biological factors of eating disorders?

A

Anxiety/depression, genetics (both run in families), less active reward center.

24
Q

What is the diathesis-stress of eating disorders?

A

Biologically predisposed, environment triggers it.

25
Q

What triggers androgen wash #1?

A

SRY gene on Y chromosome. (If SRY gene faulty/missing, no wash).

26
Q

What is wash #1 responsible for?

A

Physical sex: penis or vagina.

27
Q

What is androgen insensitive syndrome?

A

genetic disorder: no androgen receptors. Result is chromosomal male with female body.

28
Q

What causes intersexed babies?

A

Weak #1 wash.

29
Q

What did the John-Joan case prove?

A

Gender is not 100% learned.

30
Q

What was the Dr. Reinhart study?

A

Noticed intersexed infants turned into girls seemed unhappy. Used chromosomal sex to decide which physical sex to turn them into. 85% of chromosomal males were happy as boys, vs only 40% as girls. `

31
Q

What are the three different sexes?

A

Chromosomal, body and brain.

32
Q

What is wash #2 responsible for?

A

Masculinizes brain: shapes hypothalamus = INAH-3 nucleus is bigger. Sexual orientation: will be attracted to females.

33
Q

What is wash #3 responsible for?

A

Gender identity. Smaller corpus callosum, more focused neural firing. Larger BNST.

34
Q

What are three things that can interfere with the washes?

A

Genes, drugs and endocrine system problems.

35
Q

What are the endocrine system problems?

A

Adrenal and pituitary gland issues, extreme stress, many male pregnancies or older mother.

36
Q

How do we know that genes play a part in sexual orientation?

A

Fruit flies, twin research, runs in families in boys on Mom’s side.

37
Q

What is the SCN necleus?

A

Suprachiasmatic, in hypothalamus. “Master Clock”

38
Q

What is the retino-hypothalamic system?

A

Optics connected to brain stem separate from vision to detect light and dark.

39
Q

What are the “day and night” hormones?

A

Cortisol (day) and melatonin (night).