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单词 antidiuretic hormone
释义

antidiuretic hormone


an·ti·di·u·ret·ic hormone

A0338300 (ăn′tē-dī′ə-rĕt′ĭk, ăn′tī-)n. Abbr. ADH See vasopressin.

antidiuretic hormone

n (Biochemistry) another name for vasopressinAbbreviation: ADH

vas•o•pres•sin

(ˌvæs oʊˈprɛs ɪn)

n. a hormone released by the posterior pituitary gland that constricts small blood vessels and increases the absorption of water by the kidney. Also called antidiuretic hormone, ADH. [1928; orig. trademark]

antidiuretic hormone

(ADH) A hormone made by the hypothalamus and released from the pituitary gland. By making the kidneys reabsorb water, it limits urine output and helps control the body’s water balance.
Thesaurus
Noun1.antidiuretic hormone - hormone secreted by the posterior pituitary gland (trade name Pitressin) and also by nerve endings in the hypothalamusantidiuretic hormone - hormone secreted by the posterior pituitary gland (trade name Pitressin) and also by nerve endings in the hypothalamus; affects blood pressure by stimulating capillary muscles and reduces urine flow by affecting reabsorption of water by kidney tubulesADH, Pitressin, vasopressinpressor, vasoconstrictive, vasoconstrictor - any agent that causes a narrowing of an opening of a blood vessel: cold or stress or nicotine or epinephrine or norepinephrine or angiotensin or vasopressin or certain drugs; maintains or increases blood pressureendocrine, hormone, internal secretion - the secretion of an endocrine gland that is transmitted by the blood to the tissue on which it has a specific effect

antidiuretic hormone


antidiuretic hormone

(ăn'tēdīyo͞orĕt`ĭk), polypeptide hormone secreted by the posterior pituitary glandpituitary gland,
small oval endocrine gland that lies at the base of the brain. It is sometimes called the master gland of the body because all the other endocrine glands depend on its secretions for stimulation (see endocrine system).
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. Its principal action is to regulate the amount of water excreted by the kidneys. Antidiuretic hormone (ADH), known also as vasopressin, causes the kidneys to resorb water directly from the renal tubules, thus concentrating the salts and waste products in the liquid, which will eventually become urine. ADH secretion by the pituitary is regulated by neural connections from the hypothalamus, which is believed to monitor either the volume of blood passing through it or the concentration of water in the blood. Dehydration or body stress will raise ADH secretion and water will be retained. Alcohol inhibits ADH secretion. Failure of the pituitary to produce ADH results in diabetes insipidus. In pharmacological doses ADH acts as a vasoconstrictor. The structure and chemical synthesis of ADH was announced (1953) by Nobel laureate Vincent Du Vigneaud and others.

antidiuretic hormone

[¦an·tē‚dī·yə¦red·ik ′hȯr‚mōn] (biochemistry) vasopressin

antidiuretic hormone


hormone

 [hor´mōn] a chemical transmitter substance produced by cells of the body and transported by the bloodstream to the cells and organs on which it has a specific regulatory effect. adj., adj hormo´nal. Hormones act as chemical messengers to body organs, stimulating certain life processes and retarding others. Growth, reproduction, control of metabolic processes, sexual attributes, and even mental conditions and personality traits are dependent on hormones.
Hormones are produced by various organs and body tissues, but mainly by the endocrine glands, such as the pituitary, thyroid, and gonads (testes and ovaries). Each gland apparently synthesizes several kinds of hormones; the adrenal glands alone produce more than 25 varieties. The total number of hormones is still unknown, but each has its unique function and its own chemical formula. After a hormone is discharged by its parent gland into the capillaries or the lymph, it may travel a circuitous path through the bloodstream to exert influence on cells, tissues, and organs (target organs) far removed from its site of origin.
One of the best-known endocrine hormones is insulin, a protein manufactured by the beta cells of the islands of Langerhans in the pancreas that is important in carbohydrate metabolism. Other important hormones are thyroxine, an iodine-carrying amino acid produced by the thyroid gland; cortisone, a member of the steroid family from the adrenal glands; and the sex hormones, estrogen from the ovaries and androgen from the testes. Certain hormone substances can be synthesized in the laboratory for treatment of human disease. Animal hormones can also be used, as endocrine hormones are to some extent interchangeable among species. Extracts from the pancreas of cattle, for example, enabled diabetes sufferers to live normal lives even before the chemistry of insulin was fully understood.
Endocrine hormone synthesis and secretion is controlled and regulated by a closed-loop system. Negative feedback loops maintain optimal levels of each hormone in the body. If there are abnormally high levels of a hormone in the blood, feedback to the gland responsible for its production inhibits secretion. If there are abnormally low levels, the gland is stimulated to step up production and secretion. In this way a homeostatic balance is maintained. (See also endocrine glands.)
adrenocortical hormone 1. any of the corticosteroids secreted by the adrenal cortex, the major ones being the glucocorticoids and mineralocorticoids, and including some androgens, progesterone, and estrogens.2. corticosteroid.adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) corticotropin.adrenomedullary h's substances secreted by the adrenal medulla, including epinephrine and norepinephrine.androgenic hormone androgen.anterior pituitary hormone any of the protein or polypeptide hormones secreted by the anterior lobe of the pituitary gland" >pituitary gland, including growth hormone, thyrotropin, prolactin, follicle-stimulating hormone, luteinizing hormone, melanocyte-stimulating hormone, and corticotropin.antidiuretic hormone (ADH) vasopressin.corpus luteum hormone progesterone.cortical hormone corticosteroid.corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) a neuropeptide secreted by the median eminence of the hypothalamus that binds to specific receptors on the corticotroph cells of the anterior pituitary and stimulates the secretion of corticotropin.ectopic h's those secreted by tumors of nonendocrine tissues but having the same physiologic effects as their normally produced counterparts. It is not known exactly how the synthesis and secretion of endocrine hormones from nonendocrine tissues occurs. Most of these tumors are derived from tissues that have a common embryonic origin with endocrine tissues. When the cells undergo neoplastic transformation, they can revert to a more primitive stage of development and begin to synthesize hormones.
Ectopic hormones present serious problems for patients and add to the complexity of caring for those with certain kinds of neoplastic diseases. These hormones do not respond to the feedback mechanisms that regulate normal hormonal production; hence, surgery and destruction of the tumorous tissue by radiation and chemotherapy are the treatments of choice.
estrogenic hormone estrogen.follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) one of the gonadotropins of the anterior pituitary, which stimulates the growth and maturity of graafian follicles in the ovary, and stimulates spermatogenesis in the male.follicle-stimulating hormone and luteinizing hormone–releasing hormone (FSH/LH-RH) luteinizing hormone–releasing hormone.follicle-stimulating hormone–releasing hormone (FSH-RH) luteinizing hormone–releasing hormone.gonadotropic hormone gonadotropin.gonadotropin-releasing hormone (Gn-RH) luteinizing hormone–releasing hormone.growth hormone (GH) any of several related polypeptide hormones secreted by the anterior lobe of the pituitary gland that directly influence protein, carbohydrate, and lipid metabolism and control the rate of skeletal and visceral growth; their secretion is in part controlled by the hypothalamus. It is used pharmaceutically as somatrem and somatropin. Called also somatotrophin, somatotropin, and somatotrophic or somatotropic hormone.growth hormone release–inhibiting hormone somatostatin.growth hormone–releasing hormone (GH-RH) a neuropeptide elaborated by the median eminence of the hypothalamus that binds to specific receptors on the somatotroph cells of the anterior pituitary and stimulates the secretion of growth hormone.interstitial cell–stimulating hormone luteinizing hormone.lactation hormone (lactogenic hormone) prolactin.local hormone a substance with hormone like properties that acts at an anatomically restricted site; most are rapidly degraded. Called also autacoid and autocoid.luteinizing hormone (LH) a gonadotropin of the anterior pituitary gland, acting with follicle-stimulating hormone to cause ovulation of mature follicles and secretion of estrogen by thecal and granulosa cells of the ovary; it is also concerned with corpus luteum formation. In the male, it stimulates development of the interstitial cells of the testes and their secretion of testosterone. Called also interstitial cell–stimulating hormone.luteinizing hormone–releasing hormone (LH-RH) a decapeptide hormone of the hypothalamus, which stimulates the release of follicle-stimulating hormone and luteinizing hormone from the pituitary gland; it can be used in the differential diagnosis of hypothalamic, pituitary, and gonadal dysfunction. Called also follicle-stimulating hormone–releasing hormone, follicle-stimulating hormone and luteinizing hormone–releasing hormone, and gonadotropin-releasing hormone.melanocyte-stimulating hormone (MSH) a substance from the anterior pituitary gland of certain other animals but not humans; it influences the formation or deposition of melanin in the body and pigmentation of the skin.neurohypophyseal h's those stored and released by the neurohypophysis, i.e., oxytocin and vasopressin.parathyroid hormone (PTH) a polypeptide hormone secreted by the parathyroid glands that influences calcium and phosphorus metabolism and bone formation.placental h's hormones secreted by the placenta, including chorionic gonadotropin, and other substances having estrogenic, progestational, or adrenocorticoid activity.progestational hormone 1. progesterone.2. progestational agent.prolactin-inhibiting hormone a hormone released by the hypothalamus that inhibits the secretion of prolactin by the anterior pituitary gland.prolactin-releasing hormone any of various hormones elaborated by the hypothalamus that stimulate the release of prolactin by the anterior pituitary gland. Most such activity is exerted by vasoactive intestinal polypeptide, although in humans hormone" >thyrotropin-releasing hormone can also have this action. sex h's see sex hormones.somatotrophic hormone (somatotropic hormone) growth hormone.somatotropin release–inhibiting hormone somatostatin.somatotropin-releasing hormone (SRH) growth hormone–releasing hormone.steroid h's hormones that are biologically active steroids; they are secreted by the cortex" >adrenal cortex, testis, ovary, and placenta and include the progestational agents, glucocorticoids, mineralocorticoids, androgens, and estrogens. They act by binding to specific receptors to form complexes, which then enhance or inhibit the expression of specific genes.thyroid h's see thyroid hormones.thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) thyrotropin.thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) a tripeptide hormone of the hypothalamus, which stimulates release of thyrotropin from the pituitary gland. In humans, it also acts as a prolactinreleasing factor. It is used in the diagnosis of mild hyperthyroidism and Graves disease, and in differentiating between primary, secondary, and tertiary hypothyroidism.

va·so·pres·sin (VP),

(vā'sō-pres'in, vas-ō-), A nonapeptide neurohypophysial hormone related to oxytocin and vasotocin; synthetically prepared or obtained from the posterior lobe of the pituitary of healthy domestic animals. In pharmacologic doses vasopressin causes water retention and contraction of smooth muscle, notably that of all blood vessels; large doses may produce cerebral or coronary arterial spasm. Synonym(s): antidiuretic hormone, Pitressin [vaso- + L. premo, pp. pressum, to press down, + -in]

antidiuretic hormone

(ăn′tē-dī′ə-rĕt′ĭk, ăn′tī-)n. Abbr. ADH See vasopressin.

antidiuretic hormone

Arginine vasopressin Endocrinology An octapeptide hormone synthesized in the hypothalamus and released from the posterior pituitary, which promotes renal tubular reabsorption of water by kidneys in response to ↑ osmolality/↓ plasma volume with ↑ sodium and solutes; ↓ osmolality–water excess results in ↓ secretion of ADH, thereby ↑ excretion of water to maintain fluid balance; ADH is ↑ in bronchogenic carcinoma, acute porphyria, hypothyroidism, Addison's disease, cirrhosis, hepatitis, hemorrhage, shock, CHF; ADH is ↓ with diabetes insipidus, viral infection, metastatic CA, sarcoidosis, TB, Langerhans cell histiocytosis/Hand-Schuller-Christian disease, syphilis, head trauma Therapeutic effects ADH is an antidiuretic and vasopressor, and used for diabetes insipidus

va·so·pres·sin

(vā'sō-pres'in) A nonapeptide neurohypophysial hormone related to oxytocin and vasotocin; synthetically prepared or obtained from the posterior lobe of the pituitary of healthy domestic animals. In pharmacologic doses, vasopressin causes contraction of smooth muscle, notably that of all blood vessels; large doses may produce cerebral or coronary arterial spasm.
Compare: bioregulator
Synonym(s): antidiuretic hormone.
[vaso- + L. premo, pp. pressum, to press down, + -in]

antidiuretic hormone

Vasopressin. The hormone released by the rear part of the PITUITARY gland which acts on the kidneys to control water excretion. In the absence of this hormone, large quantities of urine are produced, as in DIABETES INSIPIDUS.

antidiuretic hormone

see ADH.

Antidiuretic hormone (vasopressin)

A hormone that acts on the kidneys to regulate water balance.Mentioned in: Pituitary Dwarfism

va·so·pres·sin

(VP) (vā'sō-pres'in) Nonapeptide neurohypophysial hormone related to oxytocin and vasotocin. [vaso- + L. premo, pp. pressum, to press down, + -in]

va·so·pres·sor

(vā'sō-pres'ŏr) Agent producing vasoconstriction and a rise in blood pressure, usually understood to be systemic arterial pressure unless otherwise specified.
AcronymsSeeADH

antidiuretic hormone


  • noun

Synonyms for antidiuretic hormone

noun hormone secreted by the posterior pituitary gland (trade name Pitressin) and also by nerve endings in the hypothalamus

Synonyms

  • ADH
  • Pitressin
  • vasopressin

Related Words

  • pressor
  • vasoconstrictive
  • vasoconstrictor
  • endocrine
  • hormone
  • internal secretion
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