The Adrenal Glands & Disorders Flashcards

1
Q

Where are the adrenal glands located?

A

Pyramidal structure, on top of the kidneys

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2
Q

Describe the anatomical division of the adrenal gland in terms of the different layers of the cortex

A

Capsule: surrounds gland

Cortex: (GFR) zona glomerulosa (aldosterone) zona fasiculata (cortisol) zona reticularia (androgens) SALT, SUGAR, SEX

Medulla: chromaffin cells (NA, A)

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3
Q

Name the hormones produced by the different layers of the adrenal cortex

A

Glomerulosa: mineralocorticoids (aldosterone SALT)

Fasiculata: glucocorticoids (SUGAR)

Feticularis: androgens (SEX)

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4
Q

Describe in general terms the structure and functions of the steroid hormones

A

Synthesised from cholesterol in AG, lipid soluble (can diffuse PM), bind nuclear receptors to modulate gene transcription

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5
Q

What hormones do the class ‘steroid’ include?

A

Glucocorticoids (cortisol)

Mineralocorticoids (aldosterone)

Androgens

Oestrogen

Progestins

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6
Q

What are the 3 endogenous causes of cushings?

A

Pit

Ectopic

Tumour

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7
Q

What type of receptors do steroid hormones bind?

A

Nuclear

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8
Q

What is the role of 21-hydroxylase?

A

cytochrome P450 enzyme that is involved with the biosynthesis of the steroid hormones - in the adrenal cortex.

Def = low glucocorticoids/mineralocorticoids, high = androgens

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9
Q

Explain how the steroid hormones affect their target tissues

A

Nuclear receptor = modulate gene transcription. Diffuse PM, bind receptor, dissociation of chaperone protein, receptor ligand to nucleus, dimerisation, receptor binds GREs or transcription factors = reg gene transcription

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10
Q

Explain how cortisol secretion is controlled by ACTH and CRH

A

HPA axis: CRH by hypo to AP, ACTH by AP to AG, AG prod cortisol

-ve feedback of cortisol and ATCH

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11
Q

Explain how ACTH can lead to increased pigmentation in certain areas of the body

A

Adrenal insufficiency

Decreased cortisol

-ve feedback on AP reduced

More POMC required to synthesise ACTH

High ACTH = raised melanocyte stim hormone MSH = affects melanocytes

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12
Q

What are the signs of chronic high cortisol?

A

Re-distribution of fat (abdo, buffalo hump, moon face)

Acute weight gain

Purple striae

Hyperglycaemia

Hypertension

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13
Q

What are the causes of cushings syndrome?

A

External = prescribed glucocorticoids (MOST COMMON)

Endogenous = benign pit adenoma secreting ACTH, excess cortisol from adrenal tumour, not pit/adrenal tumours prod ACTH/CRH

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14
Q

What is cushings disease?

A

benign pit adenoma secreting ACTH

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15
Q

What are purple striae indicative of and why are they formed?

A

Cushings = proteolysis of skin

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16
Q

What is cushings SYNDROME?

A

Chronic excessive exposure to cortisol

17
Q

What is the most abundant corticosteroid?

A

cortisol

18
Q

Describe the main actions of cortisol.

A

Increased protein breakdown

Increase gluconeogenesis and glycogen storage

Increased lipolysis

Anti-inflam

Immune depression

19
Q

What signals to the hypothalamus stim CRH release?

A

Pain, fever, hypoglycaemia, low BP

20
Q

How does cortisol fluctuate?

A

Highest in morning/lowest at night

21
Q

What is the function of aldosterone?

A

Reg gene transcription

Reg plasma Na, K+, arterial blood pressure

Promotes Na+/K+ pump expression = promotes reabsorption of Na and excretion of K+

Central role on RAAS

22
Q

What is hyperaldosteronism?

A

High aldosterone

Primary = defect in adrenal cortex: bilateral idiopathic adrenal hyperplasia (high aldosterone:renin ratio)

Secondary = over activity of RAAS: tumour, renal artery stenosis (low aldosterone:renin ratio)

23
Q

What are the signs of hyperalsosteronism?

A

High BP, hypernatriaemia, hypokalaemia

24
Q

What protein transports cortisol and aldosterone?

A

transcortin

25
Q

What is the treatment for hyperaldosteronism?

A

Spironolactone = mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist

26
Q

What is Addisons disease?

A

Chronic adrenal insufficiency

Cause = autoimmune atrophy

Increased skin pigmentation

27
Q

What is an addisonian crisis?

A

Symptom of severe adrenal insufficiency = hypotension, vascular collapse, pyrexia

Treat = fluids, cortisol

28
Q

Describe in general terms the structure and functions of adrenaline

A

Made from tyrosine

Flight and flight = heart B1 increased HR/contractility, lungs B2 bronchodilation, blood vessels A1 con + B2 dil

29
Q

Explain how adrenaline exerts its effects on target cells

A

GPCR: alpha 1 + 2, beta 1 + 2

30
Q

Describe the components and overall function of the renin angiotensin aldosterone system

A

Slide picture

31
Q

What are the inputs and outputs of RAAS?

A

In = hypotension, hypovolaemia.

Out = increased blood pressure, increased blood vol

32
Q

Outline pheochromocytoma

A

Chromaffin cell tumour

Rare NA secreting tumour = severe hypertension

33
Q

Describe tests of adrenal cortical function

A

CT, MRI, functional PET

Suspect Def = aldosterone def (low Na+, high K), ACTH def (low Na+, K+ norm, if no glucocorticoids taken = adrenal tumour, if taken = exogenous cushings), SynACTHen test (cort low)

Suspect Exc = aldosterone (low K+), cortisol (midnight, 24hr urine = high), dex supress: Low dose (low cortisol/ATCH), high dose (ACTH high in ectopic, low in pit adenoma)

34
Q

Explain how cortisol can have weak mineralocorticoid and androgen effects

A

Aldosterone and cortisol (a glucosteroid) have similar affinity for the mineralocorticoid receptor; however, glucocorticoids circulate at roughly 100 times the level of mineralocorticoids. An enzyme exists in mineralocorticoid target tissues to prevent overstimulation by glucocorticoids.