the thyroid and parathyroid glands
n Hormones from the thyroid gland are required for normal
growth and metabolism. The thyroid and parathyroid glands
work together to regulate calcium levels in the blood.
n Links to Bone growth and remodeling 5.1, Autoimmune
disorders 9.10, Major dietary minerals 11.13
Thyroid hormones affect metabolism and growth
The thyroid gland is located at the base of the neck in front
of the trachea, or windpipe (Figure 15.6). The main hor-
mones it produces, thyroxine (T 4 ) and triiodothyronine (T 3 ),
are known jointly as TH (thyroid hormone). TH affects cells
throughout the body. It is largely responsible for setting
a person’s basal metabolic rate
(Section 11.14). It also enhances
the production of GH, and in this
way has a major influence on
growth. Adequate TH is essential
in order for the central nervous
system of a fetus to develop prop-
erly. Optimal functioning of an
adult’s CNS depends on it as well.
The thyroid also makes the
hormone calcitonin, which helps
lower the level of calcium (and of
phosphate) in blood in response
to homeostatic feedback.
TH cannot be formed with-
out iodide, a form of iodine.
Iodine-deficient diets cause one
or both lobes of the thyroid gland
to enlarge (Figure 15.7). The
enlargement, a simple goiter, occurs after low blood levels
of TH set in motion a negative feedback loop that causes the
anterior pituitary to secrete TSH (the thyroid-stimulating
hormone thyrotropin). The thyroid attempts to make TH
but cannot do so, which leads to continued secretion of
TSH, and so on, in a sustained abnormal feedback loop.
Simple goiter is no longer common in places where people
use iodized salt.
Hypothyroidism is the clinical name for low blood levels
of TH. Metabolism slows in affected adults, so they tend to
gain weight, feel sluggish physically and mentally, and find
it difficult to tolerate cold temperatures.
Graves’ disease and some other conditions are due to
hyperthyroidism, in which metabolic activity “revs up” due
to excess of TH in the blood.
Symptoms include elevated
heart rate and blood pressure
and unusually heavy sweating.
Some cases are autoimmune
disorders, in which antibodies
wrongly stimulate thyroid cells.
In other cases the cause can
be traced to inflammation or
a tumor in the thyroid gland.
Some people are genetically pre-
disposed to the disorder.
pth from the parathyroids is
the main calcium regulator
Most of us have four parathyroid glands located on the
back of the thyroid gland (Figure 15.8A). These little glands
secrete parathyroid hormone (PTH), the main regulator
of the calcium level in blood. Calcium is important for
Figure 15.7 a diet low in the
micronutrient iodine may
cause a simple goiter.
(Scott Camazine/Science Source)
trachea
(windpipe)
thyroid
gland
thyroid
cartilage
(Adam’s
apple)
blood
vessel
Blood level of thyroid
hormone falls below
a set point.
Thyroid hormone
is secreted.
yroid Gland
Anterior Pituitary
Hypothalamus
Stimulus Response
+
Rise in the blood
level of thyroid
hormone inhibits
secretion of TRH
and TSH.
TRH
TSH
Figure 15.6 a negative feedback loop controls the secretion of thyroid hormone. (© Cengage Learning)
© Cengage Learning/Gary Head
15.6
294 Chapter 15
parathyroid glands Four
small endocrine glands
behind the thyroid gland.
Parathyroid hormone (PTH)
regulates blood calcium
levels.
thyroid gland Endocrine
gland that produces thy-
roid hormone (TH), which
is required for normal
metabolism, growth, and
development.
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