Endocrine System MCQ for RRB & SSC and other Competitive exams
61
What are the overall mechanisms by which the endocrine system maintains homeostasis?
✓ Answer:
B
Through negative feedback, antagonistic hormone pairs, hormonal rhythms, and neural-endocrine integration - maintaining internal balance
The endocrine system maintains homeostasis through multiple mechanisms: 1) Negative Feedback (most common) = Rising hormone levels inhibit their own production. Examples: T3/T4 inhibit TRH/TSH; cortisol inhibits CRH/ACTH; sex hormones inhibit GnRH/FSH/LH. 2) Antagonistic hormone pairs = Opposing hormones balance each other: Insulin vs Glucagon (blood glucose), PTH vs Calcitonin (blood calcium), Aldosterone vs ANP (blood volume/sodium). 3) Hormonal rhythms = Circadian rhythms (cortisol peaks morning), pulsatile secretion (GnRH pulses), monthly cycles (menstrual cycle). 4) Positive feedback (rare but physiologically essential) = LH surge (oestrogen causes LH surge causing ovulation), Oxytocin/labour (cervical stretch causes more oxytocin causing more contractions). 5) Neuroendocrine integration = Hypothalamus bridges nervous and endocrine systems - stress, pain, emotion alter hormone levels. 6) Target cell sensitivity = Up/down regulation of receptors.
62
What is the role of leptin in the endocrine system?
✓ Answer:
B
A hormone produced by adipose tissue that signals satiety to the hypothalamus - regulates appetite and energy balance
Leptin (from Greek leptos = thin) is a peptide hormone produced by white adipose tissue (fat cells). Its level is proportional to body fat mass (more fat causes more leptin). Actions: Acts on the hypothalamus (arcuate nucleus) causing activation of POMC/CART neurons (anorexigenic - reduce food intake, increase energy expenditure) and inhibition of NPY/AgRP neurons (orexigenic - increase food intake). Net effect: Suppresses appetite and increases energy expenditure causing reduced body weight. Leptin Resistance: In obesity, leptin levels are high but the hypothalamus doesn't respond causing continuous appetite and weight gain (vicious cycle). Leptin deficiency (rare genetic condition): Severe obesity from childhood - dramatic weight loss with leptin injections. Leptin also regulates: Puberty onset (minimum fat mass required), immune function, and bone metabolism. Compare with Ghrelin (from stomach) = the hunger hormone - stimulates appetite.
63
What is the role of the adrenal androgens (DHEA, androstenedione)?
✓ Answer:
B
Weak androgens produced by the zona reticularis - contribute to adrenarche, libido (females), pubic/axillary hair, and serve as precursors for sex hormones in peripheral tissues
Adrenal Androgens - primarily DHEA (Dehydroepiandrosterone) and Androstenedione - are produced by the zona reticularis of the adrenal cortex under ACTH stimulation. They are weak androgens (1/5th potency of testosterone). Roles: Adrenarche (age 6-8, before gonadal puberty) = DHEA production increases causing pubic/axillary hair, body odour, acne - the first signs of puberty in both sexes. Libido in females = Major androgen source for female sex drive (converted to testosterone peripherally). Precursors for sex hormones = DHEA/androstenedione converted to testosterone and oestradiol in peripheral tissues (adipose, liver, skin, bone) - particularly important POST-MENOPAUSE (main source of oestrogen in older women). DHEA levels peak in early adulthood and decline with age (adrenopause - controversial). In CAH: Excess DHEA/androstenedione due to cortisol synthesis block causing virilisation in females.
64
What is the role of the endocrine system in the stress response?
✓ Answer:
B
The endocrine system coordinates the stress response through adrenaline (acute) and cortisol (sustained) - mobilising energy, suppressing non-essential functions, and restoring homeostasis
The Endocrine Stress Response has two phases. Immediate (seconds-minutes) - Adrenaline/Sympatho-adrenal: Hypothalamus causes sympathetic NS causes adrenal medulla causes Adrenaline + Noradrenaline causing increased heart rate, increased BP, bronchodilation, increased blood glucose, increased alertness, and increased muscle blood flow. Prepares for immediate physical action (fight or flight). Sustained (minutes-hours) - Cortisol/HPA: CRH causes ACTH causes Cortisol which mobilises glucose (gluconeogenesis), breaks down protein and fat for energy, is anti-inflammatory (prevents excessive immune activation), and maintains blood pressure (sensitises vessels to catecholamines). Suppresses non-essential functions: Reproduction (reduces GnRH), Growth (reduces GH), and Digestion (reduces gut motility). Chronic stress causes sustained cortisol elevation causing metabolic syndrome, immune suppression, depression, hippocampal damage, and cardiovascular disease - the link between psychological stress and physical health.
65
What is ghrelin and what is its role?
✓ Answer:
B
A gastrointestinal hormone produced mainly by the stomach that stimulates appetite and GH release
Ghrelin is a peptide hormone produced mainly by oxyntic cells of the stomach fundus (also in the hypothalamus, pituitary, intestine). Called the hunger hormone - it is the only known peripheral hormone that increases appetite. Actions: Acts on the hypothalamus (arcuate nucleus) causing activation of NPY/AgRP neurons causing stimulation of appetite and food intake. Stimulates GH secretion from anterior pituitary (acts as a GH secretagogue). Levels rise before meals (hunger signal) and fall after eating. Promotes fat storage and weight gain. In Prader-Willi syndrome (genetic obesity disorder): Extremely high ghrelin levels causing uncontrollable hunger and severe obesity. After bariatric surgery (gastric bypass): Ghrelin levels fall significantly causing reduced appetite - partly explains weight loss. Leptin vs Ghrelin: Leptin = full (adipose); Ghrelin = hungry (stomach).
66
What is the significance of thyroid function tests (TFTs) in clinical medicine?
✓ Answer:
B
TFTs (TSH, free T4, free T3) are used to diagnose and monitor thyroid disorders - TSH is the most sensitive indicator of thyroid function
Thyroid Function Tests (TFTs): TSH (Thyroid Stimulating Hormone) = Most sensitive single test for thyroid function. High TSH = hypothyroidism (pituitary trying to stimulate failing thyroid). Low TSH = hyperthyroidism (pituitary suppressed by excess T3/T4). Normal TSH (0.4-4.0 mU/L) usually indicates normal thyroid function. Free T4 (fT4) = Measures unbound (active) T4 - used alongside TSH. Free T3 (fT3) = Used when T3 toxicosis suspected (T4 normal but T3 elevated). Anti-TPO antibodies = Positive in Hashimoto's thyroiditis and Graves' disease. TRAb (TSH receptor antibodies) = Specific for Graves' disease. Thyroglobulin = Tumour marker for differentiated thyroid cancer (follicular and papillary) post-treatment. Calcitonin = Marker for medullary thyroid carcinoma (C-cell tumour). Pattern: Primary hypothyroidism = high TSH, low fT4. Hyperthyroidism = low TSH, high fT4/fT3. Secondary hypothyroidism (pituitary failure) = low TSH, low fT4.
67
What is the role of the endocrine system in growth and development?
✓ Answer:
B
Multiple hormones coordinate growth: GH/IGF-1 (linear growth), thyroid hormones (brain/organ development), sex hormones (pubertal growth spurt), insulin (fetal growth), and cortisol (growth inhibition)
Hormonal Regulation of Growth: GH/IGF-1 = Primary stimulators of linear (height) growth after birth - stimulate epiphyseal plate chondrocytes, protein synthesis, organ growth. GH deficiency causes dwarfism; excess causes gigantism/acromegaly. Thyroid hormones (T3/T4) = Essential for brain development (fetal/neonatal) and normal growth velocity throughout childhood. Deficiency causes cretinism (intellectual disability + growth failure). Sex hormones (puberty) = Oestrogen and testosterone cause pubertal growth spurt (initially accelerate growth), then cause epiphyseal plate closure causing cessation of growth. Girls have earlier growth spurt but earlier epiphyseal closure causing shorter adult stature than boys on average. Insulin = Major fetal growth factor - maternal diabetes causes fetal hyperinsulinism causing macrosomia (large baby). Cortisol (excess) = Inhibits growth (suppresses GH secretion, direct catabolic effect on bone/cartilage) - explains growth failure in children on long-term steroids. IGF-1 = Tissue mediator of GH causing stimulation of cell proliferation throughout body.
68
What is the role of insulin in fat metabolism?
✓ Answer:
C
Insulin promotes fat synthesis (lipogenesis) and inhibits fat breakdown - making it a key anabolic hormone for adipose tissue
Insulin's effects on fat metabolism - all anabolic: Promotes lipogenesis (fat synthesis) = Activates lipogenic enzymes, promotes glucose uptake into adipocytes and converts to glycerol and fatty acids causing triglyceride storage. Inhibits lipolysis (fat breakdown) = Inhibits hormone-sensitive lipase (HSL) in adipocytes causing prevention of fatty acid release. Inhibits ketogenesis = Prevents fatty acid beta-oxidation and ketone body formation in liver. In insulin deficiency (T1DM/DKA): Lipolysis unchecked causing free fatty acids released causing liver to convert to ketone bodies (acetoacetate, beta-hydroxybutyrate, acetone) causing ketonaemia and metabolic acidosis causing DKA. In T2DM/insulin resistance: Adipocytes release more free fatty acids causing ectopic fat deposition in liver (non-alcoholic fatty liver disease/NAFLD) and muscles causing worsened insulin resistance (vicious cycle).
69
What is medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC)?
✓ Answer:
B
A thyroid cancer arising from parafollicular C-cells that produces calcitonin - associated with MEN 2
Medullary Thyroid Carcinoma (MTC) accounts for ~5-10% of thyroid cancers. Unique features: Arises from parafollicular C-cells (calcitonin-producing cells) - NOT follicular cells. Produces Calcitonin - elevated serum calcitonin is the tumour marker. May also produce CEA (Carcinoembryonic Antigen), ACTH (causing Cushing's) and other peptides. 25% are hereditary - associated with: MEN 2A (MTC + Phaeochromocytoma + Hyperparathyroidism), MEN 2B (MTC + Phaeochromocytoma + Mucosal neuromas), and Familial MTC (only MTC). All caused by RET proto-oncogene mutations - genetic testing of family members essential. Amyloid deposits in the tumour (from calcitonin precursor) - characteristic histology. Treatment: Total thyroidectomy + lymph node dissection. Does NOT respond to radioiodine (unlike follicular/papillary thyroid cancer). Prognosis: Intermediate - better than anaplastic, worse than papillary/follicular.
70
What is the significance of endocrine disruptors?
✓ Answer:
B
Environmental chemicals (pesticides, plastics, industrial chemicals) that mimic, block, or interfere with hormone receptors - disrupting normal endocrine function
Endocrine Disruptors (EDCs) are exogenous chemicals that interfere with the endocrine system by: Mimicking hormones (bind to hormone receptors and activate them inappropriately - e.g., oestrogen-like effects), Blocking hormones (occupy receptors without activating them causing block natural hormone action), and Altering hormone synthesis/metabolism. Common examples: Bisphenol A (BPA) = Found in plastics causing oestrogenic effects causing reproductive disruption. Phthalates = Plasticisers causing anti-androgenic effects causing reduced testosterone causing reproductive problems. DDT/Organochlorines = Pesticides causing oestrogenic effects. PCBs = Industrial chemicals causing thyroid disruption. Dioxins = Industrial byproducts causing widespread hormonal effects. Health concerns: Reduced fertility, early puberty, altered sexual development, obesity, thyroid disorders, and some cancers (breast, testicular, prostate). The foetal period and early childhood are most vulnerable (critical developmental windows). Growing area of research - WHO recognises EDCs as a major global health concern.