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CHAPTER 31 ORGANIZATION AND CONTROL OF THE ENDOCRINE SYSTEM Essentials of Pathophysiology
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CHAPTER 31 ORGANIZATION AND CONTROL OF THE ENDOCRINE SYSTEM Essentials of Pathophysiology.

Mar 31, 2015

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Page 1: CHAPTER 31 ORGANIZATION AND CONTROL OF THE ENDOCRINE SYSTEM Essentials of Pathophysiology.

CHAPTER 31

ORGANIZATION AND CONTROL OF THE ENDOCRINE SYSTEM

Essentials of Pathophysiology

Page 2: CHAPTER 31 ORGANIZATION AND CONTROL OF THE ENDOCRINE SYSTEM Essentials of Pathophysiology.

PRE LECTURE QUIZ TRUE/FALSE

The endocrine system uses chemical substances called hormones as a means of regulating and integrating body functions.

All hormones can cross the cell membrane. The hypothalamus controls the release of

pituitary hormones. The pituitary gland has been called the

master gland because its hormones control the function of many target glands and cells.

Glucagon, insulin, and epinephrine receptors are examples of surface (second messenger) receptors.

T

F

T

T

F

Page 3: CHAPTER 31 ORGANIZATION AND CONTROL OF THE ENDOCRINE SYSTEM Essentials of Pathophysiology.

PRE LECTURE QUIZ Hormones exert their action by binding to high-

affinity _________________ located either on the surface or inside the target cells.

Decreased hormone levels often produce an increase in receptor numbers by means of a process called _________________ ; this increases the sensitivity of the body to existing hormone levels.

The ________________ and pituitary form a unit that exerts control over many functions of several endocrine glands as well as a wide range of other physiologic functions.

Negative _________________ mechanisms regulate the level of many of the hormones in the body.

 Hormone secretions acting locally on cells other than those that produced the hormone is known as a ___________________ action.

Feedback

Hypothalamus

paracrine

Receptors

up-regulation

Page 4: CHAPTER 31 ORGANIZATION AND CONTROL OF THE ENDOCRINE SYSTEM Essentials of Pathophysiology.

HORMONES

Hormones make cells react by attaching to receptors on their membranes

A cell will only respond if it has receptors for the hormone Up-regulation: the cell makes more

hormone receptors Down-regulation: the cell makes fewer

hormone receptors Different cells respond differently to

the same hormone

Page 5: CHAPTER 31 ORGANIZATION AND CONTROL OF THE ENDOCRINE SYSTEM Essentials of Pathophysiology.

HORMONES (CONT.)

• Hormones can affect cells nearby or far away

• Endocrine – distant

• Paracrine – Nearby

• Autocrine – Self stimulating

Page 6: CHAPTER 31 ORGANIZATION AND CONTROL OF THE ENDOCRINE SYSTEM Essentials of Pathophysiology.

QUESTION

Your patient has low levels of circulating thyroid stimulating hormone. How will the cells of the thyroid gland respond?

a. No responseb. Response will depend upon the levels

of TSH.c. Down-regulationd. Up-regulation

Page 7: CHAPTER 31 ORGANIZATION AND CONTROL OF THE ENDOCRINE SYSTEM Essentials of Pathophysiology.

ANSWER

d. Up-regulationRationale: When there is diminished

hormonal activity, cells have the ability to make more hormone receptors and increase the sensitivity of the existing receptors to the hormone. This is called up-regulation.

Page 8: CHAPTER 31 ORGANIZATION AND CONTROL OF THE ENDOCRINE SYSTEM Essentials of Pathophysiology.

HORMONES (CONT.)

Hormones can be made of:

Amino acids Epinephrine, dopamine, T3, and T4

Proteins (peptide hormones) Insulin, glucagon, trophic hormones

Cholesterol (steroid hormones) Cortisol, aldosterone, testosterone

Fatty acids Ecosanoids

Page 9: CHAPTER 31 ORGANIZATION AND CONTROL OF THE ENDOCRINE SYSTEM Essentials of Pathophysiology.

QUESTION

Tell whether the following statement is true or false.

Steroid hormones are all derived from cholesterol.

Page 10: CHAPTER 31 ORGANIZATION AND CONTROL OF THE ENDOCRINE SYSTEM Essentials of Pathophysiology.

ANSWER

TrueRationale: The adrenal sex hormones,

glucocorticoids, and mineralocorticoids all arise from cholesterol and have similar chemical structures even though their functions are slightly different.

Page 11: CHAPTER 31 ORGANIZATION AND CONTROL OF THE ENDOCRINE SYSTEM Essentials of Pathophysiology.

SCENARIO

A man takes dopamine for paralysis caused by his Parkinson disease.

At first, a small dose of dopamine was all he needed

His symptoms improved significantly right after taking it, but then he froze up again

Now he needs a high dose, and the effects last only a little while

Question: What has happened to his cells and their

receptors? The doctor has decided to try giving him

an MAO inhibitor along with his dopamine. Why?

Page 12: CHAPTER 31 ORGANIZATION AND CONTROL OF THE ENDOCRINE SYSTEM Essentials of Pathophysiology.

AFTER HORMONES AFFECT BODY CELLS

They may be destroyed by enzymes at the receptor site Epinephrine, dopamine

They may be taken up by cells and destroyed Peptide hormones

They may be destroyed in the liver and passed out in the bile Steroid hormones T3 and T4

Page 13: CHAPTER 31 ORGANIZATION AND CONTROL OF THE ENDOCRINE SYSTEM Essentials of Pathophysiology.

SCENARIO

A man with liver failure has developed:

Hypokalemia Hypotension Hyperglycemia Repeated infectionsQuestion: What hormone imbalances do

you suspect? Why?

Page 14: CHAPTER 31 ORGANIZATION AND CONTROL OF THE ENDOCRINE SYSTEM Essentials of Pathophysiology.

HYPOTHALAMUS

The hypothalamus knows the state of the body:

Temperature Blood osmolarity Blood nutrients Blood hormone levels Inflammatory mediators in blood Emotions Pain

Page 15: CHAPTER 31 ORGANIZATION AND CONTROL OF THE ENDOCRINE SYSTEM Essentials of Pathophysiology.

THE HYPOTHALAMUS MAKES RELEASING HORMONES

Releasing hormones are sent to the pituitary via the hypophyseal portal system

Hypothalamus

Anterior pituitary

Hypophyseal portal system

(Image reproduced from Bowne, P.S. [2004]. CRH release tutorial. Used with author’s permission.)

Page 16: CHAPTER 31 ORGANIZATION AND CONTROL OF THE ENDOCRINE SYSTEM Essentials of Pathophysiology.

THE PITUITARY (MASTER GLAND)

CREATES TROPHIC HORMONES

They tell other endocrine organs in the body to grow and secrete their hormones

Hypothalamus makes releasing hormones

Which are sent to the anterior pituitary

The anterior pituitary releases its stored trophic hormones into the systemic circulation

(Image reproduced from Bowne, P.S. [2004]. CRH release tutorial. Used with author’s permission.)

Page 17: CHAPTER 31 ORGANIZATION AND CONTROL OF THE ENDOCRINE SYSTEM Essentials of Pathophysiology.
Page 18: CHAPTER 31 ORGANIZATION AND CONTROL OF THE ENDOCRINE SYSTEM Essentials of Pathophysiology.
Page 19: CHAPTER 31 ORGANIZATION AND CONTROL OF THE ENDOCRINE SYSTEM Essentials of Pathophysiology.

QUESTION

Tell whether the following statement is true or false.

The pituitary gland controls the release of thyroid hormone.

Page 20: CHAPTER 31 ORGANIZATION AND CONTROL OF THE ENDOCRINE SYSTEM Essentials of Pathophysiology.

ANSWER

TrueRationale: The pituitary gland (on a cue

from the hypothalamus) tells other organs or glands to produce and secrete or inhibit the appropriate hormones.

Page 21: CHAPTER 31 ORGANIZATION AND CONTROL OF THE ENDOCRINE SYSTEM Essentials of Pathophysiology.

DISCUSSION

A man’s hypothalamus has no hormone receptors.

What will happen to his production of: CRH T3 and T4 ACTH FSH Cortisol LH Testosterone GnRH TRH TSH

Question: What signs and symptoms do you

expect him to have?