Pancreas
Hypothalamus/ pituitary
Adrenal Glands
Thyroid Gland
100

The two divisions of the pancreas

What is exocrine and endocrine pancreas

100

This is another name for the posterior pituitary gland

What is neurohypophysis

100

These types of hormones are released from the cortex

What are corticosteroids/ steroids (aldosterone)

100

These are the hormones released from the thyroid gland

T3 and T4, Calcitonin

200

The cells responsible for controlling blood sugar in the pancreas

What is islets cells (alpha/ beta cells)

200

These two hormones are released from the posterior pituitary

What are oxytocin and ADH

200

Name the zones of the adrenal gland from most superior to most deep.

What is the zona glomerulosa, zona fasciculata, and zona reticularis

200

The thyroid helps regulate the amount of which ion in the bloodstream

Calcium

300

This hormone is released from alpha cells when blood sugar levels are too low.

What is glucagon

300

The type of tissue that makes up the anterior pituitary

Endocrine tissue

300

This zone produces glucocorticoids.

What is the zone fasciculata

300

Explain the steps of T3 and T4 synthesis

Thyroglobulin is made in the follicular cell, thyroglobulin leaves into the colloid, binds with iodine to make T3 and T4, T3 and T4 re-enter the follicular cell, secreted into the body

400

How does insulin interact with a cell?

Insulin is hydrophilic, therefore, it cannot enter the cell. It binds to a receptor on the outside that sends a signal inside the cell (more glucose transporters to be placed on the membrane)

400

Types of hormones that the hypothalamus synthesizes and releases

What are releasing and inhibiting hormones

400

Stress is a stimulus that causes the release of what type of hormone

Glucocorticoids (cortisol)

400

Hyperthyroidism indicates that there is a problem with what part of the HPT axis? Explain.

Thyroid gland- the thyroid gland continues to produce T3 and T4 despite low TSH levels coming from the anterior pituitary

500

This is where glucose is stored in the body

Liver, skeletal muscle

500

The molecule that the hypothalamus uses to communicate with the posterior pituitary

What is neurohormones

500

Explain the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone cycle

Low BP, Renin from the kidney acts on angiotensinogen, angiotensinogen becomes angiotensin 1, angiotensin-converting enzyme turns angiotensin 1 into angiotensin 2, causes thirst and aldosterone to be released from the adrenal cortex (zona glomerulosa), causes the reabsorption of Na+ and water, increases blood volume and raises BP

500

Secondary hypothyroidism indicates that there is a problem with what part of the HPT axis? Explain.

Anterior pituitary gland- thyroid gland is not being stimulated by the anterior pituitary to make and release T3 and T4