Lecture 26
Lecture 27
Lectures 28&29
Quiz 9
Quiz 9
100

hormonal balance of homeostasis is the function of this system

What is the Endocrine System?

100

Oxytocin has two main functions. List one of those functions

What is Positive feedback loop that drives uterine contractions for childbirth or Oxytocin drives the milk ejection reflex (milk let-down) in mammals?

100

The adrenal glands are neuro-endocrine
tissue located on or near the kidneys. Name the two glands.

What are the Adrenal Cortex and Adrenal Medulla?

100

______ hormones are synthesized from cholesterol

What is Steroid?

100

Which of these is a function of oxytocin?

*Positive feedback mechanism for labor and birthing

*Milk ejection from the nipple during breastfeeding

*Pair bonding between humans and dogs after petting

*All of these are functions of oxytocin

What is All of these are functions of oxytocin?

200

Name 3 of the five endocrine glands

What is

Anterior/posterior pituitary 

Thyroid

adrenal

Pancreas(islet cells)

Testis/Ovaries 

200

Antidiuretic Hormone is released in response to ___

What is dehydration?

200

The Adrenal Cortex receives signals from ________ and makes __________.

What is the Pituitary Gland and Corticosteroids?

200

What is the trigger for production of antidiuretic hormone?

Mechanoreceptor stimulation 

High blood pressure

Stressful stimulus 

Increased blood osmolarity

What is increased blood osmolarity?

200

The anterior pituitary receives signals from the hypothalamus through  ____________________.

Nerve stimulation from the central nervous system

Axonal projection from the hypothalamus 

the Hypophyseal portal circulation 

Paracrine cellular signaling

What is the Hypophyseal portal circulation?

300

Name the three classes of hormones

What is Steroid, Peptide/Protein, and Monoamine?

300

List the 8 hormones of the hypothalamus and where they travel to

Anterior pituitary: TRH, CRH, GnRH, GHRH, PIH, somatostatin

Posterior pituitary: ADH, oxytocin 

300

Name the gland that is involved in energy metabolism and calcium homeostasis.

What is the Thyroid gland?
300

Which of these hormones is made in the anterior pituitary, and targets the mammary glands to drive milk production?

Oxytocin

Growth Hormone

Luteinizing Hormone

Prolactin

What is Prolactin?

300

The _______________ is the region of the brain that acts as the integrator of homeostasis for the endocrine system 

Hypothalamus

Anterior pituitary

Thyroid 

Posterior pituitary

What is the Hypothalamus?

400

Name the two classes of receptors and which one acts to change gene expression in the cell

Cell Membrane and *Intracellular*

400

Growth hormone is released from the
anterior pituitary and regulated by __________

What is negative feedback?

400

Neuro-endocrine control of stress involves
both nervous and endocrine systems. List the 2 possible pathways.

What is 1. Sympathetic nervous system makes epinephrine and 2. Stress hormone response: glucocorticoid production 

400

Which of these hormones is made in the hypothalamus but stored and released from the posterior pituitary?

Thyroid releasing hormone 

Somatostatin 

Corticotropin-releasing hormone

Oxytocin

What is Oxytocin?

400

Levels of cortisol are regulated in the blood by:

Direct neuroendocrine control

Positive feedback loop through the hypothalamus

The cortisol pathway is not regulated

Negative feedback loop through the hypothalamus

What is Negative feedback loop through the hypothalamus?

500

Which hormone(s) use intracellular receptors, and which use plasma membrane receptors?

Intracellular: Steroid and lipophilic

Plasma membrane: Hydrophilic

500

Mammary glands have milk ducts
that must _______ to release milk
from the nipple for feeding

What is Contract?

500

The pancreas has both exocrine and
endocrine functions. Explain those functions.

What is 

Exocrine- secretes digestive enzymes into the
small intestine
 Endocrine- hormones - glucose homeostasis

500

Hydrophobic hormones (steroids) bind to a ____________________.

Intracellular receptor that activates a second messenger molecule

Plasma membrane receptor that activates a second messenger molecule

Plasma membrane receptor that travels to the nucleus

Intracellular receptor that travels to the nucleus

What is Intracellular receptor that travels to the nucleus?

500

Which of the following best describes the differences between the endocrine and nervous systems?

Endocrine system is fast and signals highly specific tissue; Nervous system is slow and travels broadly to various tissues

Endocrine system is fast and travels broadly to various tissues; Nervous system is slow and signals highly specific tissue

Nervous system is fast and signals highly specific tissue; Endocrine system is slow and travels broadly to various tissues

Nervous system is fast and travels broadly to various tissues; Endocrine system is slow and signals highly specific tissue

What is Nervous system is fast and signals highly specific tissue; Endocrine system is slow and travels broadly to various tissues?