Endocrine Hormone Regulation Quiz

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| Questions: 10 | Updated: Nov 26, 2025
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1. High blood glucose triggers release of which hormone, from which gland, and what is normal glucose homeostasis?

Explanation

High glucose stimulates insulin release from pancreatic beta cells, promoting glucose uptake and glycogen storage. Low glucose triggers glucagon release to mobilize glycogen. Homeostasis remains near 90 mg/100 mL, allowing stable energy regulation through coordinated hormone responses.

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About This Quiz
Endocrinology Quizzes & Trivia

This hormone regulation quiz provides a focused review of key endocrine principles, including glucose homeostasis, pancreatic hormone function, calcium regulation, and pituitary–hypothalamic interactions. Designed for anatomy, physiology, nursing, and pre-med students, the quiz tests understanding of insulin–glucagon dynamics, calcium control via calcitonin and PTH, and the structural and functional differences... see morebetween the anterior and posterior pituitary glands.

Each question includes a clear, analytical explanation to reinforce core concepts and support exam preparation. Covering essential hormone pathways and regulatory mechanisms, this resource offers a high-quality study tool for mastering foundational endocrine physiology and clinical relevance, such as thyroid disorders, glucose imbalance, and calcium homeostasis. see less

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2. Which pancreatic cells make glucagon?

Explanation

Alpha cells in the pancreatic islets secrete glucagon when blood glucose drops. Their primary function is to signal the liver to release stored glucose, ensuring stable plasma glucose levels during fasting or extended energy demand.

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3. Which cells make insulin, and which hormone goes to the liver to raise glucose?

Explanation

Beta cells produce insulin during high blood sugar, lowering glucose by promoting uptake. Glucagon is released during low glucose and acts on the liver to increase plasma glucose. This reciprocal control ensures stable metabolic regulation.

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4. Where does glucagon act to increase glucose?

Explanation

Glucagon specifically targets the liver, where it activates glycogenolysis and gluconeogenesis. These processes release glucose back into circulation, preventing hypoglycemia during fasting or intense metabolic demand.

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5. High blood calcium triggers which hormone from which gland?

Explanation

High calcium stimulates calcitonin release from the thyroid, shifting calcium into bone and promoting renal excretion. Calcitonin counteracts PTH, helping prevent dangerously elevated calcium levels and maintaining mineral homeostasis.

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6. Low blood calcium triggers which hormone from which gland?

Explanation

Low blood calcium triggers PTH release from the parathyroid glands. PTH increases calcium by stimulating bone resorption, increasing renal reabsorption, and activating vitamin D to enhance intestinal absorption.

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7. Hypothalamic neurohormones are stored and released from where?

Explanation

Hypothalamic neurohormones such as oxytocin and ADH are transported to and stored in the posterior pituitary. They are released directly into systemic circulation in response to neural signals, bypassing endocrine intermediates.

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8. Anterior pituitary is also known as?

Explanation

The anterior pituitary is the adenohypophysis, responsible for producing tropic hormones like TSH, ACTH, GH, and LH/FSH. It receives hormonal regulation through the hypothalamic portal system rather than neuronal storage.

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9. Which hormones have both tropic and non-tropic effects?

Explanation

Tropic hormones act on other endocrine glands but may also exert direct physiological effects on target tissues. This dual activity makes them both tropic (gland-stimulating) and non-tropic (acting on peripheral tissues), depending on the specific hormone.

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10. Hypothalamic hormones travel through portal vessels directly to which structure?

Explanation

Hypothalamic releasing hormones travel through the hypophyseal portal system to the anterior pituitary. This direct vascular link enables rapid regulation of pituitary output, maintaining coordinated endocrine signaling across multiple hormone axes.

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High blood glucose triggers release of which hormone, from which...
Which pancreatic cells make glucagon?
Which cells make insulin, and which hormone goes to the liver to raise...
Where does glucagon act to increase glucose?
High blood calcium triggers which hormone from which gland?
Low blood calcium triggers which hormone from which gland?
Hypothalamic neurohormones are stored and released from where?
Anterior pituitary is also known as?
Which hormones have both tropic and non-tropic effects?
Hypothalamic hormones travel through portal vessels directly to which...
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