Hormones, Hormone Substitutes, and Hormone Antagonists -- See Also Endocrine Disruptors
Exogenous agents, synthetic and naturally occurring, which are capable of disrupting the functions of the ENDOCRINE SYSTEM including the maintenance of HOMEOSTASIS and the regulation of developmental processes. Endocrine disruptors are compounds that can mimic HORMONES, or enhance or block the binding of hormones to their receptors, or otherwise lead to activating or inhibiting the endocrine signaling pathways and hormone metabolism
HORMONES secreted by the gastrointestinal mucosa that affect the timing or the quality of secretion of digestive enzymes, and regulate the motor activity of the digestive system organs
Hormones -- Physiological affect : The biochemical guide to hormones / David Aebisher (editor), Medical College of the University of Rzeszów, University of Rzeszów, Rzeszów, Poland
Hormones secreted by the PITUITARY GLAND including those from the anterior lobe (adenohypophysis), the posterior lobe (neurohypophysis), and the ill-defined intermediate lobe. Structurally, they include small peptides, proteins, and glycoproteins. They are under the regulation of neural signals (NEUROTRANSMITTERS) or neuroendocrine signals (HYPOTHALAMIC HORMONES) from the hypothalamus as well as feedback from their targets such as ADRENAL CORTEX HORMONES; ANDROGENS; ESTROGENS
Any of the hormones produced naturally in plants and active in controlling growth and other functions. There are three primary classes: auxins, cytokinins, and gibberellins
Cell surface proteins that bind gastrointestinal hormones with high affinity and trigger intracellular changes influencing the behavior of cells. Most gastrointestinal hormones also act as neurotransmitters so these receptors are also present in the central and peripheral nervous systems
Hormones, Sex -- Carcinogenicity : Advances in rapid sex-steroid action : new challenges and new chances in breast and prostate cancers / Gabriella Castoria, Antimo Migliaccio, editors
2012
1
Hormones, Sex -- History : Sex science self : a social history of estrogen, testosterone, and identity / Bob Ostertag
Hormones, Sex -- Receptors. : Advances in rapid sex-steroid action : new challenges and new chances in breast and prostate cancers / Gabriella Castoria, Antimo Migliaccio, editors
Steroid hormones produced by the GONADS. They stimulate reproductive organs, germ cell maturation, and the secondary sex characteristics in the males and the females. The major sex steroid hormones include ESTRADIOL; PROGESTERONE; and TESTOSTERONE
1
Hormones, Sex -- Toxicology : Toxicity of hormones in perinatal life / editors, Takao Mori and Hiroshi Nagasawa