ciobl
New Member
quoted by Dr shippen:
The Hormones as a Team
I know this wide spectrum of important hormones sounds fairly complicated. You might well wonder how the body can sort out their overlapping functions and cause them to work together.
By and large, the body does a superlative job. Your metabolism in tune, functioning well, is like a symphony orchestra with all the musicians playing harmoniously together, joined in one happy purpose.
Scientists now believe that the orchestra conductor, the force responsible for controlling the instruments and forging unity out of what could easily be chaos, is the pituitary gland and its related control center, the hypothalamus. The pituitary, a small organ at the base of your brain, is hidden and protected in the middle of the head. Weighing in at less than a gram (one-fortieth of an ounce), it is connected by a thin stalk to the hypothalamus, which is the lowermost part of the
brain itself. The two glands are so closely interconnected that, for practical purposes, they can hardly be thought of separately.
These master glands are the overlords of your hormone empire. They send hormonal messengers to the other glands, bearing precise directions for appropriate secretions of all the hormones we’ve been talking about. Actually, the pituitary sends the messengers, and the hypothalamus tells it what to send. For instance, by means of a hormone called ACTH (adrenal cortical stimulating hormone), the pituitary governs the output of specific adrenal cortical hormones by the adrenal gland. In a similar fashion, it directs the production of the sex hormones through pituitary controlling hormones called gonadotrophins (-trophic means to stimulate the growth of ). All the other endocrine glands we’ve discussed also receive peremptory messages from the control team in the brain.
If, as a result of these communications, the quantities of hormones and the timing of their release are ideally suited to your needs then the result will be optimal physical and mental performance. The orchestra is playing your tune. You know it, you feel it throughout the course of every restful night and energetic day. You’re really living.
In contrast to this happy picture, illness or aging may eventually appear. Then, the music loses harmony. A wrong note is struck first here, and then there, and soon, it sometimes seems, almost everywhere. Aging is a breakdown in the perfect music of youth. Something has changed. The stresses of life have upset the woodwinds, or some genetic inheritance slowly working its way to the surface has thrown the horns into disorder. Perhaps some viral or bacterial onslaught has literally damaged the quality of the instruments.
Most commonly, however---even in the absence of disease---the endocrine glands lose the capacity to manufacture their hormones in the quantities necessary for playing the beautiful music of youth. And when the balance and quantity of your hormones is not ideal, your body begins striking dreadfully sour notes. This is basic medicine, though often overlooked.
It’s also possible---as we’ll see in a moment---for the control glands, the hypothalamus and the pituitary, to lose their capacity to send the proper instructions. For most of our hormone systems, this seems to be less common than a failing productive capacity. That may not be true, however, in the case of testosterone.
Before we proceed to testosterone, let’s not forget to mention one other hormone that shares many characteristics with it. I’m referring to human growth hormone (HGH), an extremely important product of the pituitary gland. Human growth hormone is necessary for the normal growth of children and, until HGH replacement became possible, children who were deficient in it reached maturity as dwarfs. Because of its name and its known function in young people, it was assumed that HGH was not particularly important in adults. We now know that HGH is one of the body’s main maintenance and repair hormones and that the sizable loss of it that occurs as we age can have serious effects on health, leading---among many other things---to weakness, frailty, and diminished immune function. In the last few years, more and more people have been taking HGH as an anti-aging replacement medicine, and the results have frequently been impressive.
The Hormones as a Team
I know this wide spectrum of important hormones sounds fairly complicated. You might well wonder how the body can sort out their overlapping functions and cause them to work together.
By and large, the body does a superlative job. Your metabolism in tune, functioning well, is like a symphony orchestra with all the musicians playing harmoniously together, joined in one happy purpose.
Scientists now believe that the orchestra conductor, the force responsible for controlling the instruments and forging unity out of what could easily be chaos, is the pituitary gland and its related control center, the hypothalamus. The pituitary, a small organ at the base of your brain, is hidden and protected in the middle of the head. Weighing in at less than a gram (one-fortieth of an ounce), it is connected by a thin stalk to the hypothalamus, which is the lowermost part of the
brain itself. The two glands are so closely interconnected that, for practical purposes, they can hardly be thought of separately.
These master glands are the overlords of your hormone empire. They send hormonal messengers to the other glands, bearing precise directions for appropriate secretions of all the hormones we’ve been talking about. Actually, the pituitary sends the messengers, and the hypothalamus tells it what to send. For instance, by means of a hormone called ACTH (adrenal cortical stimulating hormone), the pituitary governs the output of specific adrenal cortical hormones by the adrenal gland. In a similar fashion, it directs the production of the sex hormones through pituitary controlling hormones called gonadotrophins (-trophic means to stimulate the growth of ). All the other endocrine glands we’ve discussed also receive peremptory messages from the control team in the brain.
If, as a result of these communications, the quantities of hormones and the timing of their release are ideally suited to your needs then the result will be optimal physical and mental performance. The orchestra is playing your tune. You know it, you feel it throughout the course of every restful night and energetic day. You’re really living.
In contrast to this happy picture, illness or aging may eventually appear. Then, the music loses harmony. A wrong note is struck first here, and then there, and soon, it sometimes seems, almost everywhere. Aging is a breakdown in the perfect music of youth. Something has changed. The stresses of life have upset the woodwinds, or some genetic inheritance slowly working its way to the surface has thrown the horns into disorder. Perhaps some viral or bacterial onslaught has literally damaged the quality of the instruments.
Most commonly, however---even in the absence of disease---the endocrine glands lose the capacity to manufacture their hormones in the quantities necessary for playing the beautiful music of youth. And when the balance and quantity of your hormones is not ideal, your body begins striking dreadfully sour notes. This is basic medicine, though often overlooked.
It’s also possible---as we’ll see in a moment---for the control glands, the hypothalamus and the pituitary, to lose their capacity to send the proper instructions. For most of our hormone systems, this seems to be less common than a failing productive capacity. That may not be true, however, in the case of testosterone.
Before we proceed to testosterone, let’s not forget to mention one other hormone that shares many characteristics with it. I’m referring to human growth hormone (HGH), an extremely important product of the pituitary gland. Human growth hormone is necessary for the normal growth of children and, until HGH replacement became possible, children who were deficient in it reached maturity as dwarfs. Because of its name and its known function in young people, it was assumed that HGH was not particularly important in adults. We now know that HGH is one of the body’s main maintenance and repair hormones and that the sizable loss of it that occurs as we age can have serious effects on health, leading---among many other things---to weakness, frailty, and diminished immune function. In the last few years, more and more people have been taking HGH as an anti-aging replacement medicine, and the results have frequently been impressive.
