*NURSING  >  ATI  >  NURS 611 Advanced Pathophysiology EXAM (All)

NURS 611 Advanced Pathophysiology EXAM

Document Content and Description Below

What are clinical manifestations of hypothyroidism? a. Intolerance to heat, tachycardia, and weight loss b. Oligomenorrhea, fatigue, and warm skin c. Restlessness, increased appetite, and metrorrha ... gia d. Constipation, decreased heat rate, and lethargy The lower levels of thyroid hormone result in decreased energy metabolism, resulting in constipation, bradycardia, and lethargy, thus eliminating the remaining options. 2. Thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) is released to stimulate thyroid hormone (TH) and is inhibited when plasma levels of TH are adequate. This is an example of: a. Positive feedback b. Neural regulation c. Negative feedback d. Physiologic regulation Negative feedback. Feedback systems provide precise monitoring and control of the cellular environment. Negative feedback occurs because the changing chemical, neural, or endocrine response to a stimulus negates the initiating change that triggered the release of the hormone. Thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) from the hypothalamus stimulates TSH secretion from the anterior pituitary. Secretion of TSH stimulates the synthesis and secretion of THs. Increasing levels of T4 and triiodothyronine (T3) then generate negative feedback on the pituitary and hypothalamus to inhibit TRH and TSH synthesis. 3. Lipid-soluble hormone receptors are located: a. Inside the plasma membrane in the cytoplasm b. On the outer surface of the plasma membrane c. Inside the mitochondria d. On the inner surface of the plasma membrane Inside the plasma membrane in the cytoplasm. Lipid-soluble hormone receptors are located inside the plasma membrane and easily diffuse across the plasma membrane to bind to either cytosolic or nuclear receptors. 4. The releasing hormones that are made in the hypothalamus travel to the anterior pituitary via the: a. Vessels of the zona fasciculata b. Hypophyseal stalk c. Infundibular stem d. Portal hypophyseal blood vessels Portal hypophyseal blood vessels. Releasing and inhibitory hormones are synthesized in the hypothalamus and are secreted into the portal blood vessels through which they travel to the anterior pituitary hormones. 5. Which mineral is needed for thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) to stimulate the secretion of thyroid hormone (TH)? a. Iron b. Iodide c. Zinc 2 d. Copper Iodide. TSH, which is synthesized and stored in the anterior pituitary, stimulates secretion of TH by activating intracellular processes, including the uptake of iodine necessary for the synthesis of TH [Show More]

Last updated: 2 years ago

Preview 1 out of 31 pages

Buy Now

Instant download

We Accept:

Payment methods accepted on Scholarfriends (We Accept)
Preview image of NURS 611 Advanced Pathophysiology EXAM document

Buy this document to get the full access instantly

Instant Download Access after purchase

Buy Now

Instant download

We Accept:

Payment methods accepted on Scholarfriends (We Accept)

Reviews( 0 )

$12.00

Buy Now

We Accept:

Payment methods accepted on Scholarfriends (We Accept)

Instant download

Can't find what you want? Try our AI powered Search

135
0

Document information


Connected school, study & course


About the document


Uploaded On

Aug 16, 2023

Number of pages

31

Written in

All

Seller


Profile illustration for DOCMEGG
DOCMEGG

Member since 2 years

0 Documents Sold

Additional information

This document has been written for:

Uploaded

Aug 16, 2023

Downloads

 0

Views

 135

Recommended For You

Get more on ATI »

$12.00
What is Scholarfriends

Scholarfriends.com Online Platform by Browsegrades Inc. 651N South Broad St, Middletown DE. United States.

We are here to help

We're available through e-mail, Twitter, and live chat.
 FAQ
 Questions? Leave a message!


Copyright © Scholarfriends · High quality services·