The "local hormones"
Eicosanoids break the usual hormone rules. They're signaling lipids built from 20-carbon (eicosa-) fatty acids — mainly arachidonic acid — and unlike endocrine hormones, they're not made in a gland and shipped through blood. Instead, nearly every cell makes them on the spot, and they act on the same cell (autocrine) or its neighbors (paracrine), then are degraded within seconds. That local, fast-fading design is perfect for their jobs: inflammation, pain, fever, blood clotting, blood flow, and labor.
