The pituitary gland and its disorders Flashcards

1
Q

Describe the anatomy of the pituitary gland

How many lobes?

Where does it lie?

How does it form?

A
  1. Two lobes
  2. Lies below the sella turcica
  3. the anterior lobe is derived from the imagination of the roof the embryonic oropharynx knows as Rathke’s pouch
  4. A notochordal projection forms the pituitary stalk, which connects the gland to the brain and also to the posterior lobe of the pituitary
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2
Q

Describe the blood supply of the pituitary gland

A

It has a dual blood supply:

Via long and short pituitary arteries and the second via hypophyseal portal circulation. This begins as a capillary plexus around the arc

Pituitary cells were originally classified by their standing characteristics with acid and basic dyes

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3
Q

Describe the primary, secondary and tertiary signalling of endocrine hormones

A

Primary = end organ

secondary = pituitary

Tertiary = hypothlamaus

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4
Q

What does a tumour in the pituitary cause?

A
  1. Hormone hypersecretion
  2. Space occupying lesion causing headache, visual loss, cavernous sinus invasion
  3. Hormone deficiency states causing interference with surround normal pituitary
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5
Q

What does excess Gh cause?

A

Acromegaly

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6
Q

What does to much ACTH cause?

A

Cushing’s disease

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7
Q

What does to much TSH cause?

A

Secondary thyrotoxicosis

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8
Q

What does too much LH/ FSH cause?

A

Non-functioning pituitary tumour -

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9
Q

What does too much PRL?

A

Prolactinoma

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10
Q

What causes the release of GH?

What causes a negative feedback pathway?

How does the growth hormone influence fat and muscle?

A

Somatostatin and GHRH cause the release of growth hormone acting on muscles and liver, this releases IG-1 and IGFBP-3 release form the liver causing the chondrocytes to grow causing the growth.

IG-1 causes a negative feedback pathway

Growth hormone reduces body fat, traps energy in muscle

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11
Q

What are the symptoms of Acromegaly?

A

The tongue is too large-stop breathing

large hands, feet, wrist, compression of radial nerve

sweaty hands

jaw comes forward

teeth separate and fall out

diabetes

cardiomyopathy
hypertension

bowel polyps
colonic cancer

multinodular goitre
hypogonadism

Arthropathy - an overgrowth of cartilage - changes the pressure
OSA

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12
Q

What does cortisol do?

A

Increase glucose levels

Increase lipolysis

Proteins are catabolised

Na and water retention

anti-inflammatory

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13
Q

Describe cushing syndrome

A

On previous lecture

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14
Q

What is a prolactinoma?

A

Increase the release of DA inhibits PRL release

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15
Q

What does a non-functioning pituitary tumour cause?

How can we treat it?

A

Reduce space in the brain causes headaches, visual defects. nerve palsies

cause deficiency of other hormones

Surgery and radiotherapy

no effective medical treatment

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16
Q

What order to we lose hormones?

A
  1. LH/ FSH - cant have sex
  2. GH - growth
  3. TSH - metabolism
  4. ACTH - survival
  5. Increase in prolactin - stalk compression
17
Q

What are the treatment options for pituitary tumours?

A

Surgery

Radiotherapy

Drugs which block or slow hormone production or release

18
Q

What are the causes of pituitary failure

A

Tumour

Trauma - such as TB - also affects cranial nerves - blocks these

Infection

Inflammation

Iatrogenic

19
Q

What happens if you don’t produce enough thyroid hormones

A

On slides