The hypothalamus is a collection of specialized cells that is the primary link between the nervous system and the endocrine system via the pituitary gland. It is located below the thalamus and just above the brainstem.
Through the hypothalamus and the pituitary gland which is found between the eyes, above the nasal cavity.
In simple terms...:
The hypothalamus detects low levels of a certain hormone in the blood (lets say Thyroid hormone) and so releases hormone signals (called Thyroid Releasing hormone) which travel to the pituitary gland below it telling it that the body needs more of this particular thyroid hormone. The pituitary will then produce its own signalling hormone (thyroid stimulating hormone) which will travel to the organ in question (the thyroid), telling it to produce more of its own hormone (T3 and T4).
Once the organ has produced an adequate amount of the desired hormone, levels of it in the blood rise. This level is picked up by the hypothalamus in turn, which sees that there is enough of this hormone in the body, and so stops sending its signals to the pituitary, reducing the production of thyroid hormone until levels fall again.
Hope this helps!
HYPOTHALAMUS through hypothlamo-hypophyseal tract.
The nervous system is what activates hormones in the endocrine system
Via the hypothalamus and pituitary glands, which are neuroendocrine organs.
It connects by wastes produced by your body and cells get dropped off at the endocrine system.
The hypothalamus receive neural input from the brain (being part of the nervous system), and triggers hormone release in the pituitary (part of the endocrine system)
endocrine (slow chemical messages, transported in the blood) or nervous (extremley fast electical messages transported via neurones)
The system that works closely is the nervous system
Pituaritry gland
The nervous system can affect only nearby cells. APEX
That would be the nervous system, specifically the Central Nervous system, more commonly abbreviated to CNS.
The hypothalamus links the nervous system and the endocrine systems together.
The hypothalamus is the endocrine gland that links the endocrine and nervous systems. It controls many of the pituitary hormone levels and also controls body water levels. The hypothalamus is located in the brain.the thyriod gland
Endocrine is the correct answer for Apex
endocrine (slow chemical messages, transported in the blood) or nervous (extremley fast electical messages transported via neurones)
The nervous and endocrine systems bear the major responsibility for ensuring homeostasis.
The nervous system and the endocrine system regulate the activities of all of the systems in the human body.
The endocrine systems work with the nervous system but they have a few different functions. The endocrine systems use hormones not nerves, the endocrine system is slower than the nervous system because it flows through the blood not the nerves, and the endocrine system also has gland and the nervous system does not.
The endocrine and nervous systems allow your body to regulate body functions. The endocrine system does so through hormones, and the nervous system through nervous impulses.
Negative feedback mechanism is used by two body systems: the nervous system and the endocrine system. The nervous system is the quick one and uses an intricate circuitry of neurons and your brain to respond to changes. The endocrine system is the slow one and is made up of endocrine glands that secrete hormones to counter changes.
The system that works closely is the nervous system
Nervous
V