Glands Flashcards

1
Q

What is an endocrine gland?

A

A ductless gland that secretes directly into blood flowing through them.
Secretions function at distant parts of the body (hormones)
All epithelial cells in the gland secrete the hormones

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2
Q

What is an exocrine gland?

A

A ducted gland that secretes into a location or region of the body through a duct
Secretions are mostly enzymes or lubricants.
Only the cells at the apex of the duct secrete the products (these are called parenchymal cells)

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3
Q

Where are simple alveolar ducts found?

A

Not found anywhere in the adult human body. Found in some stages of foetal development

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4
Q

Where are myoepithelial cells found?

A

Surrounding mucous acini - this is to help move the mucous out of the duct

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5
Q

Describe merocrine secretion.

A

Fusion of vesicles with apical membrane (form of exocytosis)
- e.g. acinar and endocrine glands of pancreas

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6
Q

Describe apocrine secretion.

A

Loss of cytoplasm
- e.g. lactating mammary gland, sweat glands in the axilla and external genitalia

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7
Q

Describe Holocrine secretion.

A

Complete loss of cytoplasm [or cell] (cell dies)
- e.g. sebaceous gland in skin and tarsal glands in eyelid

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8
Q

Describe Cytocrine secretion.

A

Whole cell is released as secretion
- e.g. spermatid (spermatozoa) in seminiferous tubule

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9
Q

Define glycosilation

A

The covalent attachment of sugars by enzymes to proteins and lipids to form glycoproteins and glycolipids

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10
Q

What are the 3 mechanisms for hormone release?

A
  • Hormonal (hypothalamus/anterior pituitary gland)
  • Neural (nervous system)
  • Humoral (changing level of substance in plasma)
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11
Q

Where are the parotid glands?

A

In front of the ear, in the jaw

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12
Q

What is the main enzyme secreted by the parotid glands?

A

Amylase

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13
Q

What is the function of a striated duct?

A

Prevent water loss

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14
Q

What kind of cell lines the interlobular and intralobular ducts?

A

Simple cuboidal epithelial cells

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15
Q

What kind of secretions does the parotid gland secrete?

A

Almost totally serous

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16
Q

What kind of secretions does the submandibular gland secrete?

A

Mostly serous, more mucous

17
Q

What kind of secretions does the lingual gland secrete?

A

Almost completely mucous

18
Q

How is salivary secretion controlled?

A

Neural only - no hormonal regulation. Both parasympathetic and sympathetic ANS supply salivary glands and increase salivary secretion

19
Q

What effect does the parasympathetic pathway have on saliva production?

A

Produces a large volume of watery saliva, rich in enzymes

20
Q

What effect does the sympathetic pathway have on saliva production?

A

Produces a small, thick secretion of saliva, rich in mucus

21
Q

What are the 2 blood supplies to the liver?

A

Hepatic portal vein (from small intestine delivers deoxygenated blood containing nutrients)
Hepatic artery (delivers oxygenated blood from general circulation)

22
Q

What is a portal triad made up of?
Where are they found?

A

Made up of hepatic artery, bile duct and portal vein.
Found in the liver lobules

23
Q

What is a hepatic sinusoid?

A

Irregularly shaped tube through which blood passes
Connects hepatic artery & portal vein (of portal triad) to hepatic vein.
Sinusoidal cells have large gaps between them

24
Q

What are the different types of capillary vessel?
Where are they found?

A
  • Continuous - brain, most of the body
  • Fenestrated - pituitary, small intestine, kidneys, some endocrine glands
  • Sinusoid - spleen, bone marrow, liver, lymph nodes
25
Q

What is the function of kupffer cells?

A

Trap and phagocytose any damaged or aged erythrocytes that were missed by the spleen.
After splenectomy, these cells take over the removal of 120 day old erythrocytes.

26
Q

What kind of cell is a kupffer cell?

A

Specialised macrophage

27
Q

What is the function of stellate (Ito) cells?

A

Storage of vitamin A
Found in liver

28
Q

What happens to stellate/Ito cells in liver cirrhosis?

A

They lose their vitamin A storage capability and differentiate into myofibroblasts, which deposit collagen within the perisinusoidal space, resulting in liver fibrosis

29
Q

What is the main cell type in the liver?

A

Hepatocytes - constitute 80% of liver cell population

30
Q

List some features of hepatocytes.

A
  • Remarkable regenerative ability
  • Numerous mitochondria
  • Lots of peroxisomes
  • Numerous free ribosomes
  • Lots of RER
  • Lots of SER
  • Numerous Golgi complexes
  • Glycogen deposits
31
Q

List the storage functions of the liver.

A

Metals - iron and copper
Vitamins - A, D, E & K
Sugars - Glucose as glycogen

32
Q

What are the anabolic functions of the liver?

A
  • More than 60% of all the body’s proteins - major plasma proteins, enzymes, lipid carrier proteins
  • Amino acid synthesis
  • Haemopoiesis in embryo/foetus
33
Q

List the catabolic functions of the liver.

A
  • Drugs
  • Hormones
  • Haemoglobin - bilirubin passed to gall bladder
  • Poisons/toxins
  • Sugars - fructose to glucose
  • (after splenectomy) removal of aged and damaged RBCs
34
Q

What are some other functions of the liver?

A
  • Bile production - exocrine
  • Filtering of cell debris from blood
  • Hormones/Growth factor production - endocrine
  • Modifies hormones for excretion or function