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THE ENDOCRINE SYSTEM
By Abukar salisu fago.
Composition of the Endocrine
System
The endocrine system is composed of
organs that produce and secrete hormones.
Because these organs perform mainly a
secretory function, they are also referred to
as glands
Two types of glands:
– EXOCRINE
– ENDOCRINE
EXOCRINE glands secrete their products
into ducts.
The ducts transport the products into body
cavities, into the spaces within organs, or
into the body surface.
EXOCRINE glands include oil glands,
sweat glands, mucous glands, and salivary
glands.
ENDOCRINE GLANDS
ENDOCRINE glands secrete their
products into the extracellular space
surrounding the secretory cells.
Endocrine glands are sometimes called
ductless glands.
Their products are the HORMONES,
which diffuse from here to enter the
bloodstream.
The primary endocrine glands of the body
are the pituitary gland, the thyroid gland,
the parathyroid glands, the adrenal gland,
the pancreas, and the sex glands, or gonads
(the testes in the male and ovaries in the
female).
Endocrine glands that provide a minor role
in body maintenance include the pineal
gland and the thymus gland.
The stomach, kidneys, small intestine, and
the placenta, all have a secondary role as
endocrine glands
HORMONES
Hormones are the chemical units produced
by endocrine glands.
Hormones are the means by which
endocrine glands provide control of body
activities to maintain homeostasis.
HORMONAL ACTION
Hormones are released in very small
quantities, because they are extremely
potent compounds.
Once released by secretory cells into the
extracellular space, they find their way by
diffusion into the bloodstream.
A given hormone will have an effect only
on a particular type of cell. This is called
the target cell.
The effect is limited to the target cells
because only they contain special protein
molecules in their plasma membrane that
serve as receptors, which recognize and
bind to specific hormones while rejecting
others.
Cells other than target cells are not affected
by a hormone, because they lack the
appropriate receptors.
Once a hormone has united with the
receptor on a target cell, it begins to exert
its effect.
Its effect is to alter the cell’s metabolic
processes.
Examples: a hormone may change the rates
of enzyme activities, the rate of protein
synthesis, the rates of secretion, or the rates
at which materials are transported across the
plasma membrane.
Although there are many types of hormones
that differ chemically, hormones may be
grouped into two broad categories on the
basis of their solubility: those that dissolve
in water, or are water-soluble; and those
that dissolve in lipids, or are lipid-soluble.
WATER-SOLUBLE
HORMONES
Hormones that are soluble in water
include molecules that are composed of
amino acids.
Because these hormones are soluble
only in water, they cannot pass through
the lipid plasma membrane.
Question: how can they produce an effect
on the cell if they cannot penetrate the
membrane?
This is done by passing the signal to a
second-messenger system located within the
cell. One that uses a compound called
cyclic AMP (adenosine monophasphate).
The enzymatic cascade activated by
the second-messenger system has an
enormous amplification effect within
the cell.
A single hormone molecule triggers a
single enzyme, which catalyzes
literally hundreds of reactions.
Water-soluble hormones that serve as first
messengers in this system include
epinephrine, norepinephrine (NE),
antidiuretic hormone (ADH), oxytocin
(OT), calcitonin (CT), and parathyroid
hormone (PTH).
LIPID-SOLUBLE HORMONES
Hormones that dissolve in lipids include
mainly steroid hormones.
Because the plasma membrane is composed
of a bilayer of lipid molecules, steroid
hormones can pass directly through it by
diffusion to enter the target cell quite easily.
(recall that steroids are a type of lipid also;
lipids dissolve in other lipids).
Lipid-soluble hormones activate genes to
synthesize new proteins and enzymes.
The protein products that are newly formed
include enzymes that promote the metabolic
activities specified by the hormone.
Lipid-soluble hormones that stimulate
protein synthesis include aldosterone,
cortisol, testosterone, estrogen, and
thyroxine.
PROSTAGLANDINS
Prostaglandins are a group of chemicals that
also have regulating effects on cells.
They are lipids that are produced by many
different parts of the body.
Like hormones, they are extremely potent
compounds and are released in very small
quantities.
Specifically, prostaglandins stimulate or
inhibit the formation of cyclic AMP,
thereby modulating the effect of hormones
that use cyclic AMP as a second messenger.
Because they do not induce their own effect
but instead modify the effect of a hormone,
prostaglandins as a group are not
considered true hormones.
Some prostaglandins reduce blood pressure
and open airways by causing smooth
muscles to relax, others have the opposite
effect.
Other types inhibit the secretion of HCL
from the stomach wall, increase intestinal
contractions, stimulate contraction of the
uterus, regulate metabolism, cause
inflammation, and even cause fever.
HORMONAL CONTROL
FEEDBACK CONTROL--how does an
endocrine gland “know” how much
hormone to produce and release?
This information, or feedback, is provided
by way of chemical signals that are sent to
the endocrine gland.
There are two systems that operate in this
manner: negative feedback systems and
positive feedback systems.
NEGATIVE FEEDBACK
Negative feedback systems control the
amount of hormone released by providing a
response in the opposite direction to that of
the stimulus.
In these systems, the secretion of a hormone
that accelerates a body activity is inhibited
by the negative feedback signal, and the
secretion of a hormone that slows the same
body activity is stimulated yet further.
Negative feedback systems are the most
common method of hormone regulation in
the body.
POSITIVE FEEDBACK
SYSTEMS
Positive feedback systems regulate
hormone secretion by providing a response
in the same direction as the stimulus.
When the desired response stimulated by
hormone action occurs, a chemical feedback
signal causes the endocrine gland to
increase its rate of hormone release and
more responses are stimulated.
Positive feedback systems tend to cause
extreme changes in conditions in the body
and are therefore quite unstable and
uncommon.
Example: the production of oxytocin by the
pituitary gland during childbirth. It
stimulates contractions of the uterus. Its
rising levels in the blood cause the
formation of products that stimulate further
oxytocin production, and uterine
contractions respond by gradually
increasing in strength until birth is
accomplished.
NERVOUS CONTROL
A second way of controlling hormone
release is by the nervous system.
Nervous control is responsible for
regulating only some endocrine glands,
such as the adrenal medulla and secretory
cells in the hypothalamus of the brain.
These glands secrete hormones when they
receive nerve impulses.
THE ENDOCRINE
GLANDS
Some are in the head,
some are in the neck, and
some in the abdominal
cavity.
PITUITARY GLAND
The pituitary gland, or hypophysis, is
located at the base of the brain.
It is about the size of a pea and weighs only
0.5 gram (0.02 ounce).
It is attached to the hypothalamus by a
narrow stalk, called the infundibulum, and
lies within a bony cavity formed by the
sella turcica of the sphenoid bone.
The pituitary gland produces many
hormones, some of which control the
activities of several other endocrine glands.
It thereby influences a wide range of body
functions.
The pituitary gland consists of two portions:
an anterior lobe and a posterior lobe.
ANTERIOR LOBE
Within its epithelium are five different
types of secretory cells that release
seven types of hormones.
The release of these hormones is
controlled by chemical secretions from
the hypothalamus, called regulating
factors.
The seven hormones released by the
anterior lobe are:
– growth hormone (GH): mainly bone
– prolactin (PRL): mammary glands
– thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH)
– adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH)
– melanocyte-stimulating hormone (MSH)
– follicle-stimulating hormone
(FSH):ovaries, testis
– luteinizing hormone (LH): ovaries, testis
GROWTH HORMONE
Growth hormone (GH) stimulates body
cells to grow and divide.
On a more short-term basis, the nutritional
status of your body affects the release of
GH in order to maintain a relatively
constant blood sugar level.
When sugar levels are low, a condition
called hypoglycemia exists and the
hypothalamus is stimulated to release
regulating factors.
Once these factors reach the anterior
lobe, GH is released into the
bloodstream. As a result, blood sugar
levels rise. (convert glycogen into
glucose)
High levels of sugar in the blood, or
hyperglycemia, cause the opposite
effect (GH is inhibited).
Thus, your blood sugar
levels are kept relatively
constant by negative
feedback mechanism
involving Gh
MELANOCYTE-
STIMULATING HORMONE
MSH--stimulates the
production of melanin in
the skin, causing the skin
to increase in
pigmentation.
PROLACTIN
In combination with other hormones,
prolactin (PRL) stimulates and maintains
milk secretion by the mammary glands in
females.
The actual ejection of milk is controlled by
a hormone released by the posterior lobe,
called oxytocin.
The combined secretion and
ejection of milk from the
mammary glands is an
activity referred to as
lactation.
THYROID-STIMULATING
HORMONE
The production and secretion of hormones
by the thyroid gland are stimulated by TSH.
It is influenced by the body’s metabolic
rate, levels in the blood of a thyroid
hormone called thyroxine, and other
factors.
ADRENOCORTICOTROPIC
HORMONE
The production and secretion of
hormones released by the outer
region or, cortex, of the adrenal
gland are controlled by the ACTH.
Its release is also influenced by
various forms of stress.
FOLLICLE-STIMULATING
HORMONE
FSH has a different effect upon the two
sexes.
In females, FSH stimulates the development
of eggs, or ova, each month within the
ovaries.
It also stimulates the cells in the ovaries to
secrete estrogens, the female sex hormone.
In the male, FSH stimulates the production
of sperm by the testes.
FSH production is controlled by regulating
factors released from the hypothalamus in
response to estrogens in the female and to
testerone in the male, in the manner of a
negative feedback system.
LUTEINIZING HORMONE
LH also plays a different role in each of the
two sexes.
In females, it works together with estrogens
to stimulate the ovary to release an ovum (a
process called ovulation). and prepare the
uterus for implantation of the fertilized
ovum.
In males, LH stimulates cells
within the testes to produce and
secrete testosterone.
LH secretion is controlled by the
hypothalamus by way of negative
feedback.
OXYTOCIN
OXYTOCIN (OT) stimulate
contraction of smooth muscle in
the wall of the uterus.
It also stimulates cells around
mammary ducts to contract,
thereby causing milk to eject.
ANTIDIURETIC HORMONE
ADH regulates fluid balance
in the body.
ADH causes a decrease in
urine output and an increase
in body fluid volume.
THYROID GLAND
The THYROID GLAND is the prominent
organ in the neck.
Located slightly below the larynx in front of
the trachea.
Its follicles contain a clear liquid called
colloid.
The three primary hormones are: thyroxine.
also known as T4; triiodothyronine (T3),
and calcitonin.
Thyroxine and
Triiodothyronine play
important roles in
metabolism and growth.
CALCITONIN
Calcitonin reduces the calcium and
phosphate levels in the blood.
Calcium concentrations must be kept within
narrow limits for normal nerve and muscle
function, and both ions are essential mineral
components of bone.
PARATHYROID GLANDS
The parathyroid glands are four
or five pea-shaped masses of
glandular epithelium.
They secrete one hormone,
called parathyroid hormone
(PTH).
Parathyroid Hormone (PTH)
Parathyroid hormone
(PTH) plays an important
role in maintaining the
calcium and phosphate levels
in the blood.
ADRENAL GLANDS
The Adrenal Glands are paired,
triangular masses that lie atop each
kidney.
Like the kidneys, they are located
behind the membrane that encloses the
abdominal cavity, which is called the
peritoneum
Adrenal Medulla
The adrenal medulla is
composed of modified nerve
tissue.
It secretes two hormones ,
epinephrine and
norepinephrine
Adrenal Cortex
It occupies the larger portion of the adrenal
gland.
The secretory cells in each one of the
adrenal cortex secrete steroid hormones.
These hormones are synthesized from
colesterol. They include three classes of
compounds: mineralocorticoids,
glucocorticoids, and sex hormones.
Mineralocorticoids
The primary
mineralocorticoid is
aldosterone.
This steroid hormone
maintains body fluid balance.
Sex Hormones
The two classes of sex hormones
released by the adrenal cortex are
androgens, which have a
masculinizing effect, and
estrogens, which have feminizing
effects.
Pancreas
The pancreas is a soft, oblong organ
located in the abdominal cavity behind the
stomach.
It is actually two body systems, since it
performs two distinct functions.
It is an endocrine gland, since it secretes
two important hormones into the blood
stream.
It is also a digestive organ, because of its
secretion of digestive enzymes into ducts
that empty into the small intestine.
The endocrine cells of the pancreas form
clusters called the islets of Langerhans.
The hormones play important roles in
providing body cells with sufficient
amounts of energy. They do this by
regulating the amount of sugar in the blood.
GLUCAGON--stimulates the
conversion of glycogen into the simple
sugar glucose.
INSULIN--has the opposite effect to
that of glucagon on liver cells: it
stimulates the formation of glycogen
from glucose.
Gonads
The gonads are the sex organs; that is, they
are the organs that produce the sex cells and
secrete the primary sex hormones.
In females, the ovaries , they secrete
estrogens, which are the primary female
sex hormone
In males, the testes secrete testosterone.
Pineal Gland
The pinal gland is a small structure within
the cranial cavity associated with the brain.
It is sometimes called the epithalamus
because it is attached to the upper margin of
the thalamus.
It secretes one hormone, melatonin
the pineal gland in reptiles and birds, has
been shown to regulate reproduction cycles,
hibernation cycles, and migration patterns
Thymus Gland
The thymus gland is a prominent structure
in infants and young children but
diminishes in size with advancing age.
It is a soft, irregularly shaped structure that
lies in the mediastinum on top of the heart.
It secretes a hormone known as thymosin,
which stimulates the production of certain
white blood cells called T lymphocytes
The thymus gland
plays an important role
in immunity.

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Chapter 10 endocrine system

  • 1. THE ENDOCRINE SYSTEM By Abukar salisu fago.
  • 2. Composition of the Endocrine System The endocrine system is composed of organs that produce and secrete hormones. Because these organs perform mainly a secretory function, they are also referred to as glands Two types of glands: – EXOCRINE – ENDOCRINE
  • 3. EXOCRINE glands secrete their products into ducts. The ducts transport the products into body cavities, into the spaces within organs, or into the body surface. EXOCRINE glands include oil glands, sweat glands, mucous glands, and salivary glands.
  • 4. ENDOCRINE GLANDS ENDOCRINE glands secrete their products into the extracellular space surrounding the secretory cells. Endocrine glands are sometimes called ductless glands. Their products are the HORMONES, which diffuse from here to enter the bloodstream.
  • 5. The primary endocrine glands of the body are the pituitary gland, the thyroid gland, the parathyroid glands, the adrenal gland, the pancreas, and the sex glands, or gonads (the testes in the male and ovaries in the female). Endocrine glands that provide a minor role in body maintenance include the pineal gland and the thymus gland.
  • 6. The stomach, kidneys, small intestine, and the placenta, all have a secondary role as endocrine glands
  • 7. HORMONES Hormones are the chemical units produced by endocrine glands. Hormones are the means by which endocrine glands provide control of body activities to maintain homeostasis.
  • 8. HORMONAL ACTION Hormones are released in very small quantities, because they are extremely potent compounds. Once released by secretory cells into the extracellular space, they find their way by diffusion into the bloodstream. A given hormone will have an effect only on a particular type of cell. This is called the target cell.
  • 9. The effect is limited to the target cells because only they contain special protein molecules in their plasma membrane that serve as receptors, which recognize and bind to specific hormones while rejecting others. Cells other than target cells are not affected by a hormone, because they lack the appropriate receptors.
  • 10. Once a hormone has united with the receptor on a target cell, it begins to exert its effect. Its effect is to alter the cell’s metabolic processes. Examples: a hormone may change the rates of enzyme activities, the rate of protein synthesis, the rates of secretion, or the rates at which materials are transported across the plasma membrane.
  • 11. Although there are many types of hormones that differ chemically, hormones may be grouped into two broad categories on the basis of their solubility: those that dissolve in water, or are water-soluble; and those that dissolve in lipids, or are lipid-soluble.
  • 12. WATER-SOLUBLE HORMONES Hormones that are soluble in water include molecules that are composed of amino acids. Because these hormones are soluble only in water, they cannot pass through the lipid plasma membrane.
  • 13. Question: how can they produce an effect on the cell if they cannot penetrate the membrane? This is done by passing the signal to a second-messenger system located within the cell. One that uses a compound called cyclic AMP (adenosine monophasphate).
  • 14. The enzymatic cascade activated by the second-messenger system has an enormous amplification effect within the cell. A single hormone molecule triggers a single enzyme, which catalyzes literally hundreds of reactions.
  • 15. Water-soluble hormones that serve as first messengers in this system include epinephrine, norepinephrine (NE), antidiuretic hormone (ADH), oxytocin (OT), calcitonin (CT), and parathyroid hormone (PTH).
  • 16. LIPID-SOLUBLE HORMONES Hormones that dissolve in lipids include mainly steroid hormones. Because the plasma membrane is composed of a bilayer of lipid molecules, steroid hormones can pass directly through it by diffusion to enter the target cell quite easily. (recall that steroids are a type of lipid also; lipids dissolve in other lipids).
  • 17. Lipid-soluble hormones activate genes to synthesize new proteins and enzymes. The protein products that are newly formed include enzymes that promote the metabolic activities specified by the hormone. Lipid-soluble hormones that stimulate protein synthesis include aldosterone, cortisol, testosterone, estrogen, and thyroxine.
  • 18. PROSTAGLANDINS Prostaglandins are a group of chemicals that also have regulating effects on cells. They are lipids that are produced by many different parts of the body. Like hormones, they are extremely potent compounds and are released in very small quantities.
  • 19. Specifically, prostaglandins stimulate or inhibit the formation of cyclic AMP, thereby modulating the effect of hormones that use cyclic AMP as a second messenger. Because they do not induce their own effect but instead modify the effect of a hormone, prostaglandins as a group are not considered true hormones.
  • 20. Some prostaglandins reduce blood pressure and open airways by causing smooth muscles to relax, others have the opposite effect. Other types inhibit the secretion of HCL from the stomach wall, increase intestinal contractions, stimulate contraction of the uterus, regulate metabolism, cause inflammation, and even cause fever.
  • 21. HORMONAL CONTROL FEEDBACK CONTROL--how does an endocrine gland “know” how much hormone to produce and release? This information, or feedback, is provided by way of chemical signals that are sent to the endocrine gland. There are two systems that operate in this manner: negative feedback systems and positive feedback systems.
  • 22. NEGATIVE FEEDBACK Negative feedback systems control the amount of hormone released by providing a response in the opposite direction to that of the stimulus. In these systems, the secretion of a hormone that accelerates a body activity is inhibited by the negative feedback signal, and the secretion of a hormone that slows the same body activity is stimulated yet further.
  • 23. Negative feedback systems are the most common method of hormone regulation in the body.
  • 24. POSITIVE FEEDBACK SYSTEMS Positive feedback systems regulate hormone secretion by providing a response in the same direction as the stimulus. When the desired response stimulated by hormone action occurs, a chemical feedback signal causes the endocrine gland to increase its rate of hormone release and more responses are stimulated.
  • 25. Positive feedback systems tend to cause extreme changes in conditions in the body and are therefore quite unstable and uncommon.
  • 26. Example: the production of oxytocin by the pituitary gland during childbirth. It stimulates contractions of the uterus. Its rising levels in the blood cause the formation of products that stimulate further oxytocin production, and uterine contractions respond by gradually increasing in strength until birth is accomplished.
  • 27. NERVOUS CONTROL A second way of controlling hormone release is by the nervous system. Nervous control is responsible for regulating only some endocrine glands, such as the adrenal medulla and secretory cells in the hypothalamus of the brain. These glands secrete hormones when they receive nerve impulses.
  • 28. THE ENDOCRINE GLANDS Some are in the head, some are in the neck, and some in the abdominal cavity.
  • 29. PITUITARY GLAND The pituitary gland, or hypophysis, is located at the base of the brain. It is about the size of a pea and weighs only 0.5 gram (0.02 ounce). It is attached to the hypothalamus by a narrow stalk, called the infundibulum, and lies within a bony cavity formed by the sella turcica of the sphenoid bone.
  • 30. The pituitary gland produces many hormones, some of which control the activities of several other endocrine glands. It thereby influences a wide range of body functions. The pituitary gland consists of two portions: an anterior lobe and a posterior lobe.
  • 31. ANTERIOR LOBE Within its epithelium are five different types of secretory cells that release seven types of hormones. The release of these hormones is controlled by chemical secretions from the hypothalamus, called regulating factors.
  • 32. The seven hormones released by the anterior lobe are: – growth hormone (GH): mainly bone – prolactin (PRL): mammary glands – thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) – adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) – melanocyte-stimulating hormone (MSH) – follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH):ovaries, testis – luteinizing hormone (LH): ovaries, testis
  • 33. GROWTH HORMONE Growth hormone (GH) stimulates body cells to grow and divide. On a more short-term basis, the nutritional status of your body affects the release of GH in order to maintain a relatively constant blood sugar level. When sugar levels are low, a condition called hypoglycemia exists and the hypothalamus is stimulated to release regulating factors.
  • 34. Once these factors reach the anterior lobe, GH is released into the bloodstream. As a result, blood sugar levels rise. (convert glycogen into glucose) High levels of sugar in the blood, or hyperglycemia, cause the opposite effect (GH is inhibited).
  • 35. Thus, your blood sugar levels are kept relatively constant by negative feedback mechanism involving Gh
  • 36. MELANOCYTE- STIMULATING HORMONE MSH--stimulates the production of melanin in the skin, causing the skin to increase in pigmentation.
  • 37. PROLACTIN In combination with other hormones, prolactin (PRL) stimulates and maintains milk secretion by the mammary glands in females. The actual ejection of milk is controlled by a hormone released by the posterior lobe, called oxytocin.
  • 38. The combined secretion and ejection of milk from the mammary glands is an activity referred to as lactation.
  • 39. THYROID-STIMULATING HORMONE The production and secretion of hormones by the thyroid gland are stimulated by TSH. It is influenced by the body’s metabolic rate, levels in the blood of a thyroid hormone called thyroxine, and other factors.
  • 40. ADRENOCORTICOTROPIC HORMONE The production and secretion of hormones released by the outer region or, cortex, of the adrenal gland are controlled by the ACTH. Its release is also influenced by various forms of stress.
  • 41. FOLLICLE-STIMULATING HORMONE FSH has a different effect upon the two sexes. In females, FSH stimulates the development of eggs, or ova, each month within the ovaries. It also stimulates the cells in the ovaries to secrete estrogens, the female sex hormone.
  • 42. In the male, FSH stimulates the production of sperm by the testes. FSH production is controlled by regulating factors released from the hypothalamus in response to estrogens in the female and to testerone in the male, in the manner of a negative feedback system.
  • 43. LUTEINIZING HORMONE LH also plays a different role in each of the two sexes. In females, it works together with estrogens to stimulate the ovary to release an ovum (a process called ovulation). and prepare the uterus for implantation of the fertilized ovum.
  • 44. In males, LH stimulates cells within the testes to produce and secrete testosterone. LH secretion is controlled by the hypothalamus by way of negative feedback.
  • 45. OXYTOCIN OXYTOCIN (OT) stimulate contraction of smooth muscle in the wall of the uterus. It also stimulates cells around mammary ducts to contract, thereby causing milk to eject.
  • 46. ANTIDIURETIC HORMONE ADH regulates fluid balance in the body. ADH causes a decrease in urine output and an increase in body fluid volume.
  • 47. THYROID GLAND The THYROID GLAND is the prominent organ in the neck. Located slightly below the larynx in front of the trachea. Its follicles contain a clear liquid called colloid. The three primary hormones are: thyroxine. also known as T4; triiodothyronine (T3), and calcitonin.
  • 48. Thyroxine and Triiodothyronine play important roles in metabolism and growth.
  • 49. CALCITONIN Calcitonin reduces the calcium and phosphate levels in the blood. Calcium concentrations must be kept within narrow limits for normal nerve and muscle function, and both ions are essential mineral components of bone.
  • 50. PARATHYROID GLANDS The parathyroid glands are four or five pea-shaped masses of glandular epithelium. They secrete one hormone, called parathyroid hormone (PTH).
  • 51. Parathyroid Hormone (PTH) Parathyroid hormone (PTH) plays an important role in maintaining the calcium and phosphate levels in the blood.
  • 52. ADRENAL GLANDS The Adrenal Glands are paired, triangular masses that lie atop each kidney. Like the kidneys, they are located behind the membrane that encloses the abdominal cavity, which is called the peritoneum
  • 53. Adrenal Medulla The adrenal medulla is composed of modified nerve tissue. It secretes two hormones , epinephrine and norepinephrine
  • 54. Adrenal Cortex It occupies the larger portion of the adrenal gland. The secretory cells in each one of the adrenal cortex secrete steroid hormones. These hormones are synthesized from colesterol. They include three classes of compounds: mineralocorticoids, glucocorticoids, and sex hormones.
  • 55. Mineralocorticoids The primary mineralocorticoid is aldosterone. This steroid hormone maintains body fluid balance.
  • 56. Sex Hormones The two classes of sex hormones released by the adrenal cortex are androgens, which have a masculinizing effect, and estrogens, which have feminizing effects.
  • 57. Pancreas The pancreas is a soft, oblong organ located in the abdominal cavity behind the stomach. It is actually two body systems, since it performs two distinct functions. It is an endocrine gland, since it secretes two important hormones into the blood stream.
  • 58. It is also a digestive organ, because of its secretion of digestive enzymes into ducts that empty into the small intestine. The endocrine cells of the pancreas form clusters called the islets of Langerhans. The hormones play important roles in providing body cells with sufficient amounts of energy. They do this by regulating the amount of sugar in the blood.
  • 59. GLUCAGON--stimulates the conversion of glycogen into the simple sugar glucose. INSULIN--has the opposite effect to that of glucagon on liver cells: it stimulates the formation of glycogen from glucose.
  • 60. Gonads The gonads are the sex organs; that is, they are the organs that produce the sex cells and secrete the primary sex hormones. In females, the ovaries , they secrete estrogens, which are the primary female sex hormone In males, the testes secrete testosterone.
  • 61. Pineal Gland The pinal gland is a small structure within the cranial cavity associated with the brain. It is sometimes called the epithalamus because it is attached to the upper margin of the thalamus. It secretes one hormone, melatonin the pineal gland in reptiles and birds, has been shown to regulate reproduction cycles, hibernation cycles, and migration patterns
  • 62. Thymus Gland The thymus gland is a prominent structure in infants and young children but diminishes in size with advancing age. It is a soft, irregularly shaped structure that lies in the mediastinum on top of the heart. It secretes a hormone known as thymosin, which stimulates the production of certain white blood cells called T lymphocytes
  • 63. The thymus gland plays an important role in immunity.