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Integumentary System. The skin and related structures. Functions of Your Skin. Barrier against microorganisms Prevents water loss Thermoregulation - helps control body temperature (click for link) Cutaneous sensation (for sensing your environment) Excretion of wastes (sweating)
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Integumentary System The skin and related structures
Functions of Your Skin • Barrier against microorganisms • Prevents water loss • Thermoregulation - helps control body temperature (click for link) • Cutaneous sensation (for sensing your environment) • Excretion of wastes (sweating) • Aids in vitamin D production (helps body absorb calcium and protects against some cancers) • Stores 5% of body’s blood
Layers of the skin • Epidermis (outer most layer) • Dermis (below epidermis) • Hypodermis (consists of adipose tissue (fat) - separates skin from muscles (technically not part of skin)) See Figure 5.1 on pg 153
Epidermis (see figure 5.2 on pg 154) • Top portion of the skin • Avascular (has no blood vessels - nutrients diffuse from the blood vessels in dermis) • Contains four types of cells: • Melanocytes (produce melanin (pigment) - blocks UV radiation) • Keratinocytes (produce keratin - helps prevent water loss and acts as “tough” covering) • Langerhans’ (dendritic) cells (part of immune system - prevents infection in the skin) • Merkel cells (sensory receptors for touch)
Epidermal layers (see figure 5.2 on pg 154) Outer (superficial) to inner (deep) • Stratum corneum(dead cells filled with keratin - makes resistant to penetration and abrasions) • Stratum lucidium (only in thick skin) • Stratum granulosum • Stratum spinosum • Stratum basale (bottom layer) - new cells arise from this layer through mitosis (cell division). Melanocytes found here
Dermis • Contains blood vessels supplying cells of epidermis • Contains nerve endings, sweat glands, hair follicles, sebaceous (oil) glands • Composed of the proteins collagen (strength) and elastin (stretch & recoil)
Dermal Layers Papillary layer • top portion • forms ridges called dermal papillae (forms fingerprints) • Rich in blood vessels Reticular layer • mostly collagen and elastin fibers • Hair rooted here • Contains coiled portion of sweat glands
Appendages of the skin • Sudoriferous (sweat glands) • Sebaceous (oil) glands • Hair • Nails
Sudoriferous Glands (main types) Apocrine glands Found in axillary (armpit) and anogenital region Empty secretions onto hair follicles Secretions also have fatty acids and proteins (broken down by bacteria - causes body odor) Eccrine (merocrine) glands • Most abundant type • Most numerous on forehead, palms and soles of feet • Empty secretion on skin surface • Secretion is 99% water, some salts, and small amounts of urea, ammonia, lactic acid
Other Sudoriferous Glands Ceruminous glands • Make cerumen (earwax) Mammary glands • Produce milk in females
Sebaceous (oil) glands • Attached to hair follicle: release sebum (oil) onto hair • Found throughout skin, but most numerous on face, neck, upper chest • Help to moisturize and waterproof hair and skin • A pimple results when a sebaceous gland is infected
Hair • Shaft - part of hair extending out of the skin • hair follicle (pinching in of the epidermis - surrounds hair) • Hair matrix (area of dividing new cells) • Papilla - dermal tissue at the hair root which supplies nutrients to the matrix • Hair follicle receptor - nerve ending surrounding base of follicle
Hair Growth Growth phase: • last from weeks to years (scalp) • Gets shorter (especially for men) after 40s* • Regulated by hormones and nutrition Regressive phase: • follicle shrinks, matrix cells die, hair falls out *Hair loss occurs when growth phase becomes too short for new hair to emerge from scalp
Homeostatic Imbalances of the Skin • Skin cancers (3 main types) • Burns (1st, 2nd, and 3rd)
Proto-Oncogenes Initiate mitosis (accelerator) Tumor suppressor genes Inhibit mitosis (brake) Genes that Control Cell Division *mutations must occur to both types of genes for cancer to develop
Skin Cancers Basal Cell carcinoma • most common (30% of fair skinned people will get it • 99% cure rate (surgically removed) • involves stratum basale cells • slow to metastasize
Skin Cancers Squamous Cell carcinoma • common on head and hands (but can happen on any exposed area) • Can appear as red scaly elevated bump • Can spread rapidly if not detected early • arises from cells in stratum spinosum (keratinocytes)
Skin Cancers Melanoma • metastasizes (spreads) quickly/ highest mortality rate • Appears as spreading brown/black patch • one-third of cases arise from pre-existing moles
Self-examination for melanomaABCD(E) rule • Asymmetry (sides are not the same) • Border (has indentations/bumpy texture) • Color (variation in the same patch) • Diameter (larger than a pencil eraser) • Evolution (the patch changes)
Second Degree Burns • Epidermis and papillary layer of dermis (or deeper into dermis) • Blistering occurs due to damaged blood vessels • Skin heals in 3-4 weeks on average
Third Degree Burns • Involves full thickness of skin (dermis, epidermis, hypodermis) • Dehydration most immediate threat • Low blood pressure due to fluid loss • Threat of infection • Skin grafts often necessary