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Transcript
The Endocrine System
 There are normal physical responses to scary
situations.
 The endocrine system controls the conditions in your
body by making and sending chemicals from one part
of the body to another.
 Most responses of the endocrine system are controlled
by the autonomic nervous system, because they occur
automatically (without your control).
Hormones
 Hormones are chemicals that are made in one organ and
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travel through the body to a second organ (called a “target
organ”).
The target organ responds to the chemical.
Most hormones have more than one target organ, and
many hormones affect all the cells of the body.
Because hormones are made at one location and function
at another, they are often called chemical messengers.
The hormone binds to the receptor in the target organ and
chemical changes occur.
Different types of hormones have different jobs. Examples
include: adrenaline, insulin, and estrogen.
Glands
 Glands are the structures that produce and release hormones!!
 Pituitary Gland
 Director of the endocrine system!!
 Located at the base of the brain (right above the roof of your mouth).
 Hormones produced here control growth, sexual development, and
absorption of water.
 Pineal Gland
 Buried deep in the brain (also about the size of a pea).
 Sensitive to light, and necessary for sleep, body temp, reproduction,
and aging.
 Thyroid Gland
 Found in your throat near your Adam’s apple.
 Necessary for growth and metabolism and regulation of calcium.
Glands Continued
 Thymus
 Located in your chest.
 Continues to grow until puberty when it then begins to shrink.
 Helps the body fight disease by controlling the production of
WBC’s called T cells.
 Adrenal Gland
 Located on top of your kidneys.
 Produces 30 different hormones that regulate carbohydrates,
proteins, fat metabolism, water, and salt levels.
 Some hormones help fight allergies and infections.
 Also produces adrenaline which makes your heart beat faster.
Glands Continued
 Pancreas
 Located beneath the stomach, connected to S.I.
 Secretes two hormones: insulin and glucagon. These regulate
the level of glucose in your blood.
 Ovaries and Testes
 Secrete hormones that control sexual development.
 These organs are not considered part of the “endocrine
system” but produce important hormones:
 Kidneys- produce hormones to regulate RBC production.
 Heart- produces hormones to regulate blood pressure.
Feedback Mechanisms
 Hormones are powerful chemicals and are capable of producing
drastic changes in our bodies, so their levels must be carefully
regulated.
 Homeostasis is achieved through negative feedback.
 Most feedback in the body is NEGATIVE
 Negative Feedback turns OFF the response to the hormone.
 Example: Thyroid gland releasing thyroxine.
 Some responses are controlled by POSITIVE feedback.
 The purpose is NOT to achieve homeostasis, but to produce a
response that continues to increase. This is only needed in
EXTREME CONDITIONS!!
 Example: clotting blood, fever, immune response, puberty, labor.
Balanced/Imbalanced Hormones
 When you ride a bike, you are constantly making adjustments to
maintain balance and control despite conditions
 The pancreas produces two hormones
 One is insulin which decreases the level of sugar in the blood
 The other is glucagon which increases sugar levels in the blood
 The balance of these two hormones maintains stable blood sugar
between meals
 Too little or too much or any hormone can cause serious disease
 When the pancreas produces too little insulin, sugar levels in blood
can rise to dangerous levels
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Very high levels of blood sugar can damage the circulatory system and
the kidneys
This is called diabetes where synthetic insulin is injected into the body
to replace insulin not being made by the pancreas
Hormone Balance
 The action of one hormone is balanced by the action
of another hormone.
 Example: the pancreas produces two hormones:
insulin (decreases glucose levels) and glucagon
(increases glucose levels). The balance of these two
maintain stable blood sugar between meals.
 Too little or too much of any hormone can lead to
serious disease.
 Example: Insulin -> Diabetes