ENDOCRINE SYSTEM

ĕnˈdəkrĭn, body control system composed of a group of glands that maintain a stable internal environment by producing chemical regulatory substances called hormones. The endocrine system includes the pituitary gland, thyroid gland, parathyroid glands, adrenal gland, pancreas, ovaries, and testes (see testis). The thymus gland, pineal gland, and kidney (see urinary system) are also sometimes considered endocrine organs.

The endocrine glands appear unique in that the hormones they produce do not pass through tubes or ducts. The hormones are secreted directly into the internal environment, where they are transmitted via the bloodstream or by diffusion and act at distant points in the body. In contrast, other glands including sweat glands, salivary glands, and glands of the gastrointestinal system secrete the substances they produce through ducts, and those substances are used in the vicinity of the gland.

The regulation of body functions by the endocrine system depends on the existence of specific receptor cells in target organs that respond in specialized ways to the minute quantities of the hormonal messengers. Some endocrine hormones, such as thyroxine from the thyroid gland, affect nearly all body cells; others, such as progesterone from the female ovary, which regulates the uterine lining, affect only a single organ. The amounts of hormones are maintained by feedback mechanisms that depend on interactions between the endocrine glands, the blood levels of the various hormones, and activities of the target organ. Hormones act by regulating cell metabolism. By accelerating, slowing, or maintaining enzyme activity in receptor cells, hormones control growth and development, metabolic rate, sexual rhythms, and reproduction.

Pituitary Control

The master gland, i.e., the gland that regulates many of the other endocrine glands, is the pituitary, located at the base of the brain. Also called the hypophysis, the pituitary secretes at least five hormones that directly affect the other endocrine glands. It secretes thyrotropin, which manages thyroid gland activity, adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), which regulates activity of the adrenal cortex, and three gonadotropic hormones, follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), luteinizing hormone (LH), and luteotropic hormone (LTH), all of which control the growth and reproductive activities of the sex glands. The pituitary also produces substances that do not act directly on other endocrine glands: somatotropic hormone, or growth hormone, which controls growth in all tissues; antidiuretic hormone (ADH), which controls the rate of water excretion in the urine; oxytocin, which stimulates uterine contraction and helps regulate milk production by the breasts; and melanocyte-stimulating hormone, which regulates the activity of the melanocytes, or pigment-producing cells.

Adrenal Gland

The adrenal gland is another endocrine gland regulated by the pituitary. The adrenal cortex, the outer part of each of the two adrenal glands, produces aldosterone, cortisol, and other steroids. These substances regulate salt concentration in body fluids and glucose, fat, and protein metabolism. The inner portion of the gland, the adrenal medulla, secretes epinephrine (adrenaline) and norepinephrine, substances connected with the autonomic nervous system that help the body to respond to danger or stress.

The Thyroid Gland

The thyroid, located below the larynx and partially surrounding the trachea, produces thyroxine, which controls the metabolic rate of most body cells, and calcitonin, which is responsible for maintaining proper calcium serum levels in the body.

The Sex Hormones

The testes produce the male sex hormone testosterone, which controls the development of the male sex organs as well as secondary sex characteristics. The pituitary hormone LH regulates testosterone production, and FSH initiates sperm formation in the testes. In females, FSH, LH, and LTH are integrated into the complex monthly cycles of ovulation, production of the hormones estrogen and progesterone by the ovaries and corpus luteum, and menstruation; LTH also contributes to lactation. Estrogen controls growth of the sex organs and breasts and regulates secondary sex characteristics. The most important function of progesterone is to prepare the uterine lining for implantation of a fertilized egg.

Other Endocrine Glands

The other endocrine glands are not directly controlled by the pituitary. The four parathyroid glands, located behind the thyroid, secrete a hormone that regulates calcium and phosphate metabolism. The endocrine portion of the pancreas, called the islets of Langerhans, secretes insulin, which regulates the level of sugar (glucose) in the blood and glucagon, which raises blood sugar level. The thymus, sometimes considered another endocrine gland, processes lymphocytes in newborn animals, seeding the lymph nodes and other lymph tissues; it is partly responsible for the development of the organism's immune system (see immunity). The kidney is sometimes considered an endocrine gland because it secretes the hormone renin which, with other substances, regulates blood pressure. The kidney produces a glycoprotein called erythropoietin, which stimulates red blood cell production. The pineal gland produces a substance called melatonin, which helps regulate the body's internal clock.

The Hypothalamus

Physiological processes are under nervous system as well as endocrine control and a gland adjacent to the pituitary, called the hypothalamus, mediates between the two systems. The hypothalamus secretes pituitary-regulating substances in response to nervous system stimuli including smell, taste, pain, and emotions. Thus, stress, cold, heat, and other stimuli release CRF, or adrenocorticotropic hormone-releasing factor, from the hypothalamus, causing ACTH to be produced by the pituitary, which in turn stimulates the production of the adrenal hormone cortisol. Similar chemical regulatory mechanisms operate in the regulation of the sex and thyroid hormones. Hypothalamic activity is also regulated by other body substances, e.g., cortisol inhibits the production of hypothalamic CRF.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Endocrine System  - 1321 results

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...CCR , 107 , 156 crowding, effect on endocrine system, 217 - 220 Daniels, G. E., 121...Ehrhardt, A. A., 44 Elias, M., 86 endocrine changes: in childhood, 61 ; during infancy, 61 endocrine function, in female depression, 137...
...claim that immune systems have cultural and...notion of the immune system denies that the life of such systems is embedded in the...and psychoimmune systems exist in relation...mediators in the endocrine system may reflect social...
...conception of living systems. All of them were concerned...the various organs and systems in living organisms...function of the nervous system and its relationship with the endocrine system. Sherrington...Action of the Nervous System in 1906. Henderson...in the elaboration of systems concepts in mid-century...
...Kretser DM, et al. Changes in the pituitary-testicular system with age. Clin Endocrinol (Oxf) 5:349-372, 1976. 87. Carroll PR, Whitmore WF Jr, Herr HW, et al. Endocrine and exocrine profiles of men with tes- ticular tumors before...
...within the central nervous system-that is, brain physiology...referential, control system cycle. The continuous...its emotive, hormonal, endocrine, and motor systems, as well as its total nervous system, interacting with its...
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journal articles on: Endocrine System  - 1183 results

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...presents various endocrine systems in which hormones...primarily on the system responses in normal...of the hormone systems, the reader is...are produced by endocrine glands, including...central nervous system, the hypothalamic...the nervous and endocrine systems. For example...
...or hormonal, system is the primary...of alcohol on endocrine function are multiple...bodys hormonal systems. Located deep...central nervous system; and growth...interrelationship between the endocrine and immune systems. In addition...functions of the endocrine and immune systems are intimately...on the immune system, see the article...
...Cocktail of Environmental Endocrine-Disrupting Compounds Disturbs...environmental chemicals, including endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs...in utero disruption of this system is likely to have long-term...compounds, and many are termed endocrine-disrupting compounds (EDCs...their effects on physiologic systems. These EDCs are normally...
...growth and reproductive systems. These pollutants are...reviews the concept of endocrine disrupters and then...likely to utilize. Endocrine Disrupter Theory Essentially...the human reproductive system. D-H Lee published...100 articles involving endocrine disruption have been...
...were confirmed using our test system. Two of 4 previously untested...differences among the assay systems used. We also observed differences...according to our exposure scoring system was similar to the listed...antiandrogenic in our test system), was recommended as a replacement...previous publications regarding endocrine disruption. These compounds...
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...tumors might not be a result of the tumors structure. Family history of headache and the impact of the tumor on the endocrine system may also play a part. (Source: Levy M. J., et al. Correspondence: Peter J. Goadsby, Institute of Neurology...
...harm the bodys hormonal system. It took four years...tremendous impact," says Endocrine/Estrogen Letter publisher...environmentalists have branded endocrine disrupters (organochlorines...really contaminated systems are making a comeback...tout as being horrible endocrine problems for the environment...
...the gonadotropin-releasing hormones is impaired, then the endocrine glands targeted by these releasing hormones will not be stimulated...bladder emptying when stimulated by the parasympathetic nervous system. When the bladder becomes obstructed, this muscle fatigues...
...ranges near and far from heavily used roads and sites of human-animal interaction. Whenever any vertebrate is stressed, an endocrine response releases glucocorticoids, a general class of stress hormones. Millspaugh looks for a specific hormone, corctiscosterone...
...many of which you have in your home-to ensure that they arent making you feel lousy. These potential intruders, called endocrine disrupters, are found in cosmetics, pesticides, solvents, plastics, and waxes. By interfering with the bodys natural...
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...Hormones to Re-balance the Bodys Endocrine System, Rather Than Any One-Size...Their effects vary widely but the endocrine system produces and releases different...hormones to rebalance the bodys endocrine system. Unlike synthetic hormones...
...for regulatory concern over endocrine-disrupting chemicals. But...researchers yeast-estrogen test system for routine examination of...scientific literature on either endocrine disruptors or synergistic...clearly and repeatedly documents endocrine effects in humans, laboratory...
...Thoughts Affect Immune System. Byline: Shelley...immune, nervous and endocrine systems with the brain, says...Northwest. The immune system does not operate independently...of the nervous and endocrine or hormone systems, as previously thought...
...Chemicals; Aust Regulatory System out of Step with Rest of World...contaminant and suspected endocrine disruptor. It was prohibited...possible carcinogen and suspected endocrine disruptor. It causes birth...contaminant and suspected endocrine disruptor.a Dimethoate...
...funding to continue to develop its new formulation approach to endocrine therapy and to complete phase one clinical trials of its lead...chief executive officer of Fusion IP, said: "Diurnals endocrine therapies have great potential for patients suffering from...
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encyclopedia articles on: Endocrine System  - 19 results

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...sometimes considered another endocrine gland, processes lymphocytes...is sometimes considered an endocrine gland because it secretes...processes are under nervous system as well as endocrine control and a gland adjacent...mediates between the two systems. The hypothalamus secretes...
PITUITARY GLAND small oval endocrine gland that lies at the base of the brain...gland of the body because all the other endocrine glands depend on its secretions for stimulation (see endocrine system ). Anatomy and Function Physiologically...
...problems, hypertension, endocrine disturbances, diabetes...the interactions of the endocrine system, central nervous system, and immune system. Researchers believe that studies of these biological systems can help to show how an...
...various hormones are produced and secreted by the endocrine glands (see endocrine system ), including the pituitary, thyroid, parathyroids...cells). The passage of chyme (see digestive system ) from the stomach to the duodenum causes the...
...from a single cell to a complex system of tubes that unite and open onto a surface through a duct. The endocrine glands, e.g., the thyroid...directly into the bloodstream (see endocrine system ). Exocrine glands secrete their...
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