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PowerPoint 演示文稿 - Shandong University
PowerPoint 演示文稿 - Shandong University

... 20 years old, 6ng/ml; 20 – 40 years old, 3ng/ml; 40 – 70 years old, 1.6ng/ml. The change of GH concentration within one day. ...
Endocrine System Part 1
Endocrine System Part 1

...  Regulate hormonal activity of the gonads  Follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH)  Stimulates follicle development in ovaries  Stimulates sperm development in testes  Luteinizing hormone (LH)  Triggers ovulation of an egg in females  Stimulates testosterone production in males ...
Compulsive Masturbation Biochemical Effects
Compulsive Masturbation Biochemical Effects

... Recent research suggests that the firing of dopamine neurons is a motivational chemical as a result of reward‐ anticipation. This is based on evidence that, when a reward is perceived to be greater than expected, the firing of certain  dopamine neurons increases, which correspondingly increases desi ...
Endocrine System
Endocrine System

... • It has more sustained impulses • It is a “duct” less system. It gets secreted then heads directly to the blood stream. ...
Endocrine System
Endocrine System

... Follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) Luteinizing hormone (LH) Prolactin (PRL) Adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) Melanocyte-stimulating hormone (MSH) ...
02. Role of the central nervous system and endocrine glands
02. Role of the central nervous system and endocrine glands

... input, both stimulatory and inhibitory, from virtually all areas of the central nervous system, and specific neural pathways influence secretion of the individual hypophysiotropic hormones. • A large number of neurotransmitters (for example, the catecholamines and serotonin) are released at the syna ...
The Endocrine System Lecture
The Endocrine System Lecture

... system. They secrete two main hormones, estrogen and progesterone. – Estrogen- hormone responsible for secondary sex characteristics and the for the sex drive in females; the “egg producing” hormone – Progesterone- hormone that builds up the lining of the uterus to prepare it for the fertilized ovum ...
Hypothalamus - University of Washington
Hypothalamus - University of Washington

... the hypothalamic sulcus which separates it from the thalamus and laterally it is bounded by the internal capsule and the subthalamus. The lamina terminalis (the boundary between the diencephalon and telencephalon) forms the rostral boundary and an imaginary line extending from the caudal aspect of t ...
2-Anterior pituitary hormones
2-Anterior pituitary hormones

... 1-Regulation of netabolic rate . The Thare the single most important determinat of basal metabolic rate. TH increase the oxygen consumption and heat production of most body tissues ,anotable exception being the brain . This ability to increase BMR is termed a calorigenic effect. 2-Control of growth ...
45_InstGuide_AR
45_InstGuide_AR

... adeno- 5 gland; -hypo 5 below (adenohypophysis: also called the anterior pituitary, a gland positioned at the base of the hypothalamus) andro- 5 male; -gen 5 produce (androgens: the principal male steroid hormones, ...
LECTURE OUTLINE
LECTURE OUTLINE

... The pineal gland produces melatonin that is involved in our daily sleep-wake cycle. Hormones from Other Tissues Other organs not considered endocrine glands do secrete hormones. Leptin Leptin is produced by adipose tissue and it signals satiety. Growth Factors A number of different types of organs a ...
ENDOCRINE SYSTEM THE PITUITARY GLAND
ENDOCRINE SYSTEM THE PITUITARY GLAND

... Hypothalamus ...
Ch 17 Powerpoint
Ch 17 Powerpoint

... • E. Gonadotropin Releasing Hormone (GnRH) Target = anterior pituitary gland Effect = stimulate release of Follicle Stimulating hormone (FSH) &Luteinizing hormone (LH) ...
8.2 Major Endocrine Organs
8.2 Major Endocrine Organs

... Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only. ...
Adrenal medulla
Adrenal medulla

... • Keep concentration of hormones in bloodstream constant • When levels drop: rate of production increases • When levels are high: rate of production decreases • NEGATIVE FEEDBACK SYSTEM: mechanism for regulation of hormone concentration in the bloodstream ...
The Endocrine System
The Endocrine System

... • Thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) • Adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) • Follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) • Luteinizing hormone (LH) • Prolactin (PRL) • Melanocyte stimulating hormone (MSH) ...
The Endocrine System
The Endocrine System

...  Influences metabolic activities by means of hormones  Responses occur more slowly but tend to last longer than those of the nervous system  Endocrine glands: pituitary, thyroid, thymus, pancreas, parathyroid, adrenal, and pineal glands ...
Chapter 45. - RMC Science Home
Chapter 45. - RMC Science Home

...  Hypothalamus integrates endocrine & nervous systems  Hormone releasing cells in hypothalamus are specialized neurons – they can synthesize hormones, release hormones and they can conduct nerve impulses ...
Unit P: Endocrine System
Unit P: Endocrine System

... d. When blood level of hormone increases, brain hormones stop 2. Nervous control – in some cases, sympathetic nervous system causes direct release of hormone from gland (for example, when stress causes the adrenal medulla to secrete adrenalin) ...
Name ____ hr ____ January 2009 Unit 6: Hormones Monday
Name ____ hr ____ January 2009 Unit 6: Hormones Monday

... 15. Complete the chart of hormone (these should also be memorized, use page 523 for help) Class of Hormone ...
Endocrine System
Endocrine System

... b. Brains gets message and sends out hormone to stimulate gland c. Gland secretes more hormone d. When blood level of hormone increases, brain hormones stop 2. Nervous control – in some cases, sympathetic nervous system causes direct release of hormone from gland (for example, when stress causes the ...
UNIT 5 Lecture 16 CONTROL SYSTEMS
UNIT 5 Lecture 16 CONTROL SYSTEMS

... receptors, influences by other hormones. In a permissive effect, the action of some hormones requires recent stimulation by other hormones. In some cases there may be a synergistic effect or antagonistic effect. Down-regulation occurs when the number of receptors decreases, thereby decreasing the re ...
ANP 201 Dr Smith - University of Agriculture Abeokuta
ANP 201 Dr Smith - University of Agriculture Abeokuta

... 2. Steroids: these are large group of hormones originating from cholesterol e.g. testosterone and estrogen 3. Proteins and polypeptides: these are the largest group of hormones and they vary in length from 8 to more than 180 amino acids with CHO attached to it e.g. hypothalamic and pituitary hormone ...
presentation source
presentation source

... This enzyme produces cyclic AMP (cAMP), which activates protein kinase enzymes within the cell cytoplasm. B. Other hormones may activate phospholipase C when they bind to their receptors. This leads to the release of inositol triphosphate (IP3), which stimulates the endoplasmic reticulum to release ...
Document
Document

... 7. Which of the following statements about hormone activation is true? (2.0 分)A.Prohormones are inactive messengers that must undergo conversion to an active form at their site of production. B.Conversion of T3 to T4 is an example of hormone activation. C.Conversion of testosterone to estradiol is ...
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Prolactin

Prolactin (PRL), also known as luteotropic hormone or luteotropin, is a protein that in humans is best known for its role in enabling female mammals to produce milk; however, it is influential over a large number of functions with over 300 separate actions of PRL having been reported in various vertebrates. Prolactin is secreted from the pituitary gland in response to eating, mating, estrogen treatment, ovulation, and nursing. Prolactin is secreted in a pulsatile fashion in between these events. Prolactin also plays an essential role in metabolism, regulation of the immune system, and pancreatic development.Discovered in non-human animals around 1930 by Oscar Riddle at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory on Long Island, New York, and confirmed in humans in 1970 by Henry Friesen prolactin is a peptide hormone, encoded by the PRL gene.Although often associated with human milk production, prolactin plays a wide range of other roles in both humans and other vertebrates. (For example, in fish—the oldest known vertebrates—an important function is probably related to control of water and salt balance.) Prolactin also acts in a cytokine-like manner and as an important regulator of the immune system. It has important cell cycle related functions as a growth-, differentiating- and anti-apoptotic factor. As a growth factor, binding to cytokine like receptors, it also has profound influence on hematopoiesis, angiogenesis and is involved in the regulation of blood clotting through several pathways. The hormone acts in endocrine, autocrine, and paracrine manner through the prolactin receptor and a large number of cytokine receptors.Pituitary prolactin secretion is regulated by endocrine neurons in the hypothalamus, the most important ones being the neurosecretory tuberoinfundibulum (TIDA) neurons of the arcuate nucleus, which secrete dopamine (aka Prolactin Inhibitory Hormone) to act on the D2 receptors of lactotrophs, causing inhibition of prolactin secretion. Thyrotropin-releasing factor (thyrotropin-releasing hormone) has a stimulatory effect on prolactin release, however Prl is the only adenohypophyseal hormone whose principal control is inhibitory.Several variants and forms are known per species. Many fish have variants prolactin A and prolactin B. Most vertebrates including humans also have the closely related somatolactin. In humans, three smaller (4, 16, and 22 kDa) and several larger (so called big and big-big) variants exist.
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