In this Chapter:
20.1. Hypothalamic and pituitary hormones and their drugs
20.2. Hormones of the epiphysis and their drugs
20.3. Thyroid hormones and antithyroid drugs. Calcitonin
20.3.1. Thyroid hormones and their drugs
20.3.2. Antithyroid drugs
20.3.3. Calcitonin (thyrocalcitonin)
20.4. Parathyroid hormones and their drugs
20.5. Pancreatic hormones, their drugs and synthetic antidiabetic drugs
20.6. Adrenocorticosteroids, their drugs and antagonists
20.6.1. Glucocorticoids
20.6.2. Mineralocorticoids
20.7. Sex hormones, their drugs and derivatives, synthetic substitutes and antagonists
20.7.1. Female sex hormones, their drugs and antagonists
20.7.2. Male sex hormones, their drugs and anagonists
20.7.3. Anabolic steroids
Hormones1 are biologically active substances, produced by the endocrine glands and special cell groups in various tissues2. They play the most important role in the humoral regulation of various functions of the body. Moreover, some hormones are neuromodulators.
The importance of hormones is particularly evident when there is a hypofunction of the endocrine glands. For example, failure of the pancreatic islet cells leads to the development of diabetes mellitus, parathyroid gland failure which causes hypocalcaemia (associated with convulsions) and insufficiency of the antidiuretic hormone of the posterior pituitary lobe - diabetes insipidus. At the same time there are diseases, associated with increased production of hormones. Thus, hyperfunction of the thyroid gland causes hyperthyroidism (Basedow's disease, Graves' disease), excessive production of the somatotropic hormone of the anterior pituitary lobe - gigantism, acromegaly.