Ductless glands that secrete chemical messengers called hormones directly into the bloodstream to regulate body functions such as growth, metabolism, and reproduction.
The master gland, thyroxine and iodine, insulin and diabetes, adrenaline, and the ductless nature of endocrine glands are recurring biology facts, and iodine deficiency disorders link to public-health questions.
Endocrine glands are ductless and pour hormones into blood, while exocrine glands (sweat, saliva) use ducts; the pancreas does both. Goitre is caused by iodine deficiency affecting the thyroid, not by a problem with insulin.
Ductless endocrine glands secrete hormones into blood; pituitary is the master gland, thyroid makes iodine-dependent thyroxine, pancreas makes insulin, adrenals make adrenaline.
concept vitamins and deficiencies, concept human blood groups, concept enzymes