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-body temperature, water balance, heart rate, secretion of releasing factors and inhibiting factors that stimulate the anterior pituitary to produce other hormones/ inhibit, production of hormones that travel along the nerve fibres into the posterior pituitary.
it is made up of secretory cells. there are no nerves connecting to the hypothalamus , rather it is connected by a complex network of blood vessels lying in the infundibulum
the anterior lobe. This lobe receives releasing factors from the hypothalamus via blood vessels in the infundibulum. this then stimulates the production if hormones in response to stimulus by hypothalamus and releases them into systemic circulation. the posterior lobe is not a true endocrine gland, it does not produce and secrete hormones only stores and release them.
1. the hypothalamus produces releasing factors 2. these are secreted into the blood vessels of the infundibulum 3. releasing factors travel through these blood vessels to the anterior pituitary. 4. the releasing factors stimulate the anterior pituitary to produce and release other hormones. 5. the hormone produced is released into the systemic circulation
-Gonadotropins, e.g (FSH and LH) -Growth hormone (GH) -Thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) -Adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) -Prolactin (PRL)
Females: it works with LH to bring about ovulation and to form a structure called the corpus luteum after ovulation.
Males: stimulates the interstitial cells in the testes to secrete male sex hormones.
1. the hypothalamus manufactures the hormones oxytocin and ADH: Anti-diuretic hormone.
2. These travel down the nerve fibres within the infundibulum to the posterior pituitary.
3. the hormones are then released into the systemic circulation by the posterior pituitary in response to nerve impulses.
anabolic hormone as it builds up tissues.
-increases height (bone and muscle growth) in children and adolescents, protein synthesis, increases muscle mass, metabolism of fats, increases bone mineralisation and density, growth of internal organs (but not the brain), acts on the liver to increase blood glucose (increasing gluconeogeneis)