Introduction to endocrinology Flashcards

1
Q

Define endocrinology

A

The study of endocrine glands (tissues) and the substances they secrete

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2
Q

Define endocrine gland

A

A gland that makes and secretes hormones into the bloodstream, through which they travel to affect distant targets

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3
Q

Define hormone

A

A chemical substance produced by cells and released especially into the blood and having a specific effect on cells or organs usually at a distance from the place of origin

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4
Q

Define exocrine gland

A

A gland that secretes its products through ducts opening onto an epithelium rather than directly into the blood.

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5
Q

What is endocrine secretion?

A

Secretion of a hormone into the bloodstream to act on a distant target

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6
Q

Define paracrine

A

of, relating to, promoted by, or being a substance secreted by a cell and acting on adjacent cells.

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7
Q

Define autocrine

A

of, relating to, promoted by, or being a substance secreted by a cell and acting on surface receptors of the same cell.

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8
Q

What are the 4 types of chemical messengers?

A

1) Neurotransmitters (act like paracrine)
2) Neuroendocrine messengers
3) Hormones (ie. endocrine messengers)
4) Cytokines (peptides with autocrine, paracrine or endocrine functions)

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9
Q

List the main endocrine organs

A
  • Hypothalamus
  • Pituitary (anterior and posterior)
  • Thyroid
  • Thymus
  • Adrenal
  • Pancreas
  • Kidney
  • Testes
  • Ovary
  • Uterus
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10
Q

List the main hormones

A
  • Glucocorticoids
  • Insulin, glucagon
  • Thyroid hormones
  • Gastric hormones
  • Intestinal hormones
  • ADH, RAAS
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11
Q

What are the major molecular types of hormones?

A
  • Modified single amino acids eg. catecholamines (adrenaline, noradrenaline, dopamine and serotonin).
  • Peptides eg. Thyrotropin Releasing Hormone, Antidiuretic hormone, Somatostatin, Insulin, PTH, gonadotrophs (FSH, TSH, LH)
  • Steroids (derives from cholesterol) eg. cortisol, sex steroids (eg. testosterone), vitamin D
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12
Q

Describe the characteristics of amino acids and peptides

A
  • water soluble
  • rapid changes in [plasma]
  • Short (sec-to-min) plasma half life
  • cell membrane receptor
  • mechanism: activate preformed enzymes, secretory granules, constitutive + bursts
  • rapid (sec-to-min) speed of effect
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13
Q

Describe the characteristics of steroids and thyroid hormones

A
  • lipid soluble
  • slow fluctuations in [plasma]
  • long (min-to-days) plasma half life
  • intracellular receptor
  • mechanism: stimulate protein synthesis, direct rapid passage, related to secretion rate
  • Slow (hrs-to-days) speed of effect
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14
Q

Describe how catecholamines, peptides and proteins are transported in the blood

A

Water-soluble hormones are carried in free form in the blood. Dissolve in blood

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15
Q

Describe how steroids and thyroid hormones are transported in the blood

A

Hydrophobic (fat-soluble) hormones.

  • Transported bound to plasma binding proteins. Binding affinity is important
  • The hormone is:
    1) Considered inactive
    2) Protected from degradation
    3) Acts as a reservoir
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16
Q

What are the signalling mechanisms of water-soluble hormones?

A

Are large and hydrophilic (water-soluble)
Cannot pass through membranes
Bind to cell surface receptors, e.g. G protein-coupled receptors (GPCR) –> Adenylyl cyclase or phospholipase C; tyrosine kinase receptors

17
Q

What are the signalling mechanisms of hydrophobic hormones?

A

Are large and hydrophobic (lipid soluble) can diffuse across the plasma membrane
Bind to intracellular and cell surface receptors

18
Q

What is negative feedback?

A

Output reduces the original stimulus

19
Q

What is positive feedback?

A

Output enhances the original stimulus

20
Q

What is the difference between a tropic hormone and a trophic hormone?

A

A tropic hormone affects other endocrine glands.

A trophic hormone affects growth and development directly

21
Q

What is primary endocrine dysfunction?

A

Too much of effector hormone from endocrine organ

22
Q

What is secondary endocrine dysfunction?

A

Overstimulation of the effector endocrine organ by excessive tropic hormone

23
Q

What effects does cortisol (a glucocorticoid) have on the body?

A

1) Decrease bone function, increase bone resorption
2) Decrease connective tissue
3) Inhibit inflammatory and immune response
4) Maintain cardiac output, decrease endothelial permeability, increase arteriolar tone
5) Facilitate maturation of the foetus
6) Increase glomerular filtration and water clearance
7) Modulate emotional tone, wakefulness
8) Maintain muscle function, decrease muscle mass

24
Q

What is Cushing’s syndrome?

A

Glucocorticoid excess

Symptoms:

  • Central weight gain
  • Change in appearance – moon face
  • Depression
  • Psychosis
  • Insomnia
  • Amenorrhoea
  • Poor libido
  • Thin skin
  • Bruising
  • Growth arrest
  • Back pain
  • Polyuria/polydipsia

Treatment is surgery to remove tumour or drugs to inhibit cortisol production

25
Q

What is Addison’s syndrome?

A

Hypoadrenalism - reduced glucocorticoids and mineralocorticoids

Symptoms:

  • Weight loss
  • Anorexia
  • Weakness
  • Fever
  • Depression
  • Impotence/amenorrhoea
  • Nausea/vomiting
  • Diarrhoea/constipation
  • Confusion
  • Abdominal pain
  • Back pain

Causes:

  • Destruction of adrenal cortex
  • Reduced glucocorticoid, mineralocorticoid and sex steroid production