Week 3 - H - Online tutorials - thyroid Flashcards

1
Q

What is the butterfly shaped endocrine organ?

What does it sit anterior to?

A

Thyroid gland

Sits anterior to the trachea

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2
Q

The gland moves on swallowing as it is attached to the thyroid cartilage and the upper end of the trachea

What attaches the thyroid gland to the cricoid cartilage at the upper end of the trachea?

A

Posterior suspensory ligament - the berry ligament

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3
Q

What are the two different kind of cells that make up the thyroid gland?

A

The follicular cells and the parafollicular cells (C-cells)

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4
Q

What produces the substance thyroglobulin?

A

The follicular cells

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5
Q

What cells take up iodine from the blood?

What does the iodine act on via what enzyme?

A

The follicular cells take up the iodine and the iodine joins to the tyrosine residues on the thyroglobulin via the enzyme thyroid peroxidase

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6
Q

How are the thyroid hormones produced from the thyroglobulin?

A

Lysosomes act on the thyroglobulin in the follicular cells releasing the thyroid hormones via diffusion into the bloodstream

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7
Q

What are the names of the two thyroid hormones produced in the follicles and where are they stored until required?

A

T3 - tri-iodothyronine
T4 - thyroxine

Stored in the colloid until required by the body

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8
Q

The majority of secreted hormones is triiodothyronine

True or false

A

False

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9
Q

T3 and T4 are both hydrophilic molecules

True or false?

A

False - both hydrophobic

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10
Q

Thyroid hormones work in conjuction with growth hormone when controlling metabolism
What are two other key things they have a role in?

A

Bone turnover
and

Thermogenesis

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11
Q

What are the three main roles of growth hormone when acting on fat tissue, liver and muscle tissue?

A

When acting on fat, increases lipolyis to increase plasma fatty acids
When acting on liver increases gluconeogenesis to increase plasma glucose

When acting on muscle, increases protein synthesis and decrease plasma amino acids

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12
Q

How do thyroid hormones increase responsiveness to neurotransmitters such as adrenaline and noradrenaline?

A

It achieves this by increasing the number of receptors

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13
Q

What can hyperthyroidism do to a persons behaviour?

What can hypothyroidism do to a females menstrual cycle /sex drive?

A

Can make them agitated / always on edge

Can cause a woman to have oligomenorrhea/amenorrhea due to the increased prolactin because of the increased TRH and decrease their sex drive as the reproductive organs are slowed down

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14
Q

What is the TSH receptor antibody produced in grave’s disease which prevents the thyroid from stopping producing T4 and T3 hormones?

A

TSI - thyroid stimulating immunoglobulin - acts in the same way as TSH

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15
Q

Is obstructive sleep apnoea found in patients with hyper or hypo thyroidism?

A

Patients with hypothyroidism

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16
Q

What test is done that screens for 9 different rare but serious conditions in children? one of the conditions is congenital hypothyroidism

A

Guthrie test

17
Q

Guthrie tests is also known as the Heel prick test

If congenital hypothyroidism is found to be positive, what is done?

A

baby is given thyroxine to help with normal development

18
Q

What does the absence of thyroxine after 3 months of age lead to?

A

leads to permanent developmental delay cretinism

19
Q

How does prolactin lead to oligo/amenorrhea?

A

Prolactin inhibits the release of FSH which will prevent the production of oestrogen required for ovulation

20
Q

How do carbimazole and propylthiouracil work to treat hyperthyroidism?

A

Both drugs inhibit thyroid peroxidase from attaching the iodine to tyrosine residues on thyroglobulin, thus preventing formation of MIT & DIT (mono-iodotyrosine and di-iodotyrosine)

(Carbimazole is a pro-drug as after absorption it is converted to the active form, methimazole. Methimazole prevents thyroid peroxidase enzyme from iodinating and coupling the tyrosine residues on thyroglobulin)