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Alright, now we're going to compare these
two systems that sometimes overlap.
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And a lot of people have a
big misconception of the two.
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You have exocrine system and
you have the endocrine system.
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So, what's the difference
between the two?
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Number one is that the
endocrine system makes hormones.
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So, chemical messengers that are
transported through the blood.
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Versus exocrine systems
do not make hormones.
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They just make secretions,
so non-hormones.
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I'll explain later
what I mean by that.
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Non-hormones.
So, what else do they do?
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The difference between the two is endocrine system --
as I mentioned before -- is a ductless system.
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So, I'll put this in quotes:
ductless system. Right?
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So, rather than having ducts,
this has hormones. Right?
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So, it's a ductless system, meaning that
as soon as the hormones are produced
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in the endocrine system, they're
secreted directly into the blood.
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Alright? And so they're not
really stored in any real ducts.
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Vice versa, exocrine system
is a duct system. Right?
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So, whatever those non-hormone secretions are --
so, any kind of fluid: sweat, tears, um...what else?
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Oils, milk production -- all of those
are actually stored in these ducts
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and need to be stimulated in order
to cause some kind of release.
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Alright? So, duct vs. ductless.
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So, exocrine is a duct system and
endocrine is a ductless system.
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Alright? Let's look at examples now.
So, I mentioned a couple of the examples.
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So, the exocrine system -- so, the sweat
glands, or the sudoriferous glands.
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Right? So, you have the
sudoriferous or sweat glands.
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You have the oil glands -- the sebaceous --
these are all examples. Let's put a "Ex." here.
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Sebaceous -- so, what is sebaceous?
These are the oil glands. Right?
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So, you have lacrimal glands,
so tear glands.
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You know, you have milk glands, so the
mammary glands for production of milk.
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So, whenever milk is produced with the hormone
that's secreted from the anterior pituitary prolactant,
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the mammary glands begin a storage
reservoir for all the milk. Alright?
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Endocrine gland is all the glands
of the endocrine system. Right?
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So, they have [inaudible] ducts.
So, if we start from the brain,
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we can look at the hypothalamus,
the pituitary -- Right? So, hypothalamus.
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The pituitary glands,
anterior or posterior, either/or.
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Uh...pituitary. Right?
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You have, for example, the thyroid gland.
For example, you have the adrenal gland, etc.
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Right? So, there's a lot of
endocrine glands here.
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So, the difference again is
between these two phenomena.
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One secretes hormones -- endocrine secretes hormones,
exocrine secretes non-hormones, secretions like fluids.
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Endocrine is a ductless, meaning that every single
hormone that's created is secreted directly into your blood.
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Versus exocrine is a duct system where all the fluids
that are created are stored in these duct networks.
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And that's the comparison between the
endocrine system and the exocrine system.