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PowerPoint Lecture Outlines to accompany Hole’s Human Anatomy and Physiology Eleventh Edition Shier w Butler w Lewis Chapter 13 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. 1 Chapter 13 Endocrine System • Endocrine glands are ductless • Exocrine glands have ducts 2 Endocrine Glands Paracrine secretions Endocrine glands • act locally • release hormones • affect only neighboring cells • hormones travel through blood to target cells Autocrine secretions • affect only the secreting cell 3 Comparison of Nervous System and Endocrine System • Neurons release neurotransmitters into a synapse, affecting postsynaptic cells • Glands release hormones into the bloodstream • Only target cells of hormone responds 4 Comparison of Nervous System and Endocrine System 5 Major Endocrine Glands 6 Chemistry of Hormones Steroid or Steroid-Like Hormones • sex hormones • adrenal cortex hormones Nonsteroid Hormones • amines • proteins • peptides • glycoproteins • most hormones 7 Types of Hormones 8 Structural Formulas of Hormones 9 Actions of Steroid Hormones • hormone crosses membranes • hormone combines with receptor in nucleus • synthesis of mRNA activated • mRNA enters cytoplasm to direct synthesis of protein 10 Actions of Steroid Hormones 11 Actions of Nonsteroid Hormones • hormone binds to receptor on cell membrane • adenylate cyclase activated • ATP converted to cAMP • cAMP promotes a series of reactions leading to cellular changes 12 Actions of Nonsteroid Hormones 13 Prostaglandins • paracrine substances • act locally • very potent in small amounts • regulate cellular responses to hormones • can activate or inhibit adenylate cyclase • controls cAMP production • alters cell’s response to hormones • wide variety of functions 14 Control of Hormonal Secretions • primarily controlled by negative feedback mechanism 15 Negative Feedback 16 Major Endocrine Glands 17 Pituitary Gland Two distinct portions • anterior pituitary (adenohypophysis) • posterior pituitary (neurohypophysis) 18 Pituitary Gland Control • Hypothalamic releasing hormones stimulate cells of anterior pituitary to release hormones • Nerve impulses from hypothalamus stimulate nerve endings in the posterior pituitary gland to release hormones 19 Hypothalamic Hormones 20 Hormones of the Pituitary Gland 21 Thyroid Gland 22 Thyroid Gland Hormones 23 Disorders of the Thyroid Gland 24 Disorders of the Thyroid Gland Graves Disease • Hyperthyroidism Cretinism • Infantile hypothyroidism 25 Parathyroid Glands 26 Parathyroid Hormone 27 Parathyroid Hormone Mechanism by which PTH promotes calcium absorption in the intestine 28 Disorders of the Parathyroid Glands 29 Adrenal Glands 30 Hormones of the Adrenal Medulla 31 Hormones of the Adrenal Cortex 32 Hormones of the Adrenal Cortex 33 Hormones of the Adrenal Cortex 34 Pancreas 35 Hormones of the Pancreatic Islets 36 Insulin and Glucagon Insulin and glucagon function together to stabilize blood glucose concentrations 37 Other Endocrine Glands Pineal Gland • secretes melatonin • regulates circadian rhythms Thymus Gland • secretes thymosins • promotes development of certain lymphocytes • important in role of immunity 38 Other Endocrine Glands Reproductive • ovaries produce estrogens and progesterone • testes produce testosterone • placenta produces estrogens, progesterone, and gonadotropins 39 Stress Types of Stress • physical stress • psychological stress 40 Responses to Stress 41 Life-Span Changes • endocrine glands decrease in size • muscular strength decreases as GH levels decrease • ADH levels increase due to slower break down in liver and kidneys • calcitonin levels decrease; increase risk of osteoporosis • PTH level changes contribute to risk of osteoporosis • insulin resistance may develop • changes in melatonin secretion affect the body clock • thymosin production declines increasing risk of infections 42 Clinical Application Growth Hormone Ups and Downs • Gigantism - hypersecretion of GH in children • Acromegaly – hypersecretion of GH in adults • Dwarfism – hyposecretion of GH in children Figure shows oversecretion of GH in adulthood as changes occur in the same person at ages (a) nine, (b) sixteen, (c) thirty-three, and (4) fifty-two 43