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Integumentary System. Functions. Covers and protects the body What does the skin protect us from? Pathogens Injury Ultra-violet radiation. Functions. 2. Regulate body temperature How does it regulate temperature? Sweating Dilate/constrict of blood vessels Goose bumps . subcutaneous.
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Functions • Covers and protects the body What does the skin protect us from? • Pathogens • Injury • Ultra-violet radiation
Functions 2. Regulate body temperature How does it regulate temperature? • Sweating • Dilate/constrict of blood vessels • Goose bumps
subcutaneous Functions 3. Excretes Waste What wastes are excreted? Urea as sweat
Functions 4. Reduces water loss Keeps the body from drying out!
Functions 5. Houses sensory receptors Chemo Mechano Chemo Photo Mechano
Four basic types of integumentary tissue • Epithelium – epidermis • Connective tissue - dermis • Muscle tissue • Nervous tissue
There are 2 main layers of skin I. Epidermis II. Dermis
Epidermis • Keratinized stratified squamous epithelium • Four types of cells • Keratinocytes – deepest, produce keratin (tough fibrous protein) • Melanocytes - make dark skin pigment melanin • Merkel cells – associated with sensory nerve endings • Langerhans cells – macrophage-like dendritic cells • Layers (from deep to superficial) • Stratum basale or germinativum – single row of cells attached to dermis; youngest cells • Stratum spinosum – spinyness is artifactual; tonofilaments (bundles of protein) resist tension • Stratum granulosum – layers of flattened keratinocytes producing keratin (hair and nails made of it also) • Stratum lucidum (only on palms and soles) • Stratum corneum – horny layer (cells dead, many layers thick) (see figure on next slide)
Stratum corneum Dead keratinocytes Stratum lucidum Stratum granulosum Lamellar granules Keratinocyte Langerhans cell Stratum spinosum Melanocyte Merkel cell Stratum basale Tactile disc Sensory neuron Dermis Epidermis Outer (surface) layers of skin 10-30 cells thick Two Parts: Inner part composed of living cells Outer part is of dead cells
Epidermis Inner layers Lowest layer of cells reproduce and push older cells toward the surface. As cells near the surface, they flatten and their organelle disintegrate
Epidermis Inner layers These cells also begin producing Keratin a tough, fibrous protein. This replaces cytoplasm.
Epidermis – Outer layers The Keratin producing cells die as they move toward the surface. Outer dead layer waterproofs and protects inner layers It is shed continually and is completely replaced in 2 - 4 weeks
Epidermis What do we find in the epidermis? Melanocytes What are melanocytes? Cells that produce melanin. What is melanin? A dark brown pigment What does melanin do? Gives skin it’s color Protects sensitive dermis from U-V radiation
Skin color • Three skin pigments • Melanin: the most important • Carotene: from carrots and yellow vegies • Hemoglobin: the pink of light skin • Melanin in granules passes from melanocytes (same number in all races) to keratinocytes in stratum basale • Digested by lysosomes • Variations in color • Protection from UV light vs vitamin D?
Epidermis Melanocytes Do some people have more melanocytes than other people? NO!
Epidermis Skin pigmentation is due to the type and amount of melanin produced Eumelaninproduces darker pigments Phaeomelaninproduces lighter pigments and freckles These often occur together in varying amounts
Dermis Deeper layers of skin 10-20 times thicker than epidermis. Top layer arranged In ridges.
Dermis Ridges help the epidermis bind to the dermis. The uneven ridges create fingerprints
Accessory Organs of the Dermis 1. Hair follicles – tube-like depression where the hair develops
Hair and hair follicles: complexDerived from epidermis and dermisEverywhere but palms, soles, nipples, parts of genitalia *“arrector pili” is smooth muscle * Hair bulb: epithelial cells surrounding papilla Hair papilla is connective tissue________________
Functions of hair • Warmth – less in man than other mammals • Sense light touch of the skin • Protection - scalp • Parts • Root imbedded in skin • Shaft projecting above skin surface • Make up of hair – hard keratin • Three concentric layers • Medulla (core) • Cortex (surrounds medulla) • Cuticle (single layers, overlapping)
Types of hair • Vellus: fine, short hairs • Intermediate hairs • Terminal: longer, courser hair • Hair growth: averages 2 mm/week • Active: growing • Resting phase then shed • Hair loss • Thinning – age related • Male pattern baldness • Hair color • Amount of melanin for black or brown; distinct form of melanin for red • White: decreased melanin and air bubbles in the medulla • Genetically determined though influenced by hormones and environment
Accessory Organs of the Dermis 2. Sebaceous glands – secret oily sebum to soften and waterproof skin
Sebaceous (oil) glands • Entire body except palms and soles • Produce sebum by holocrine secretion • Oils and lubricates
Accessory Organs of the Dermis 3. Nails – protective covers of ends of fingers and toes.
Nails • Of hard keratin • Corresponds to hooves and claws • Grows from nail matrix
Accessory Organs of the Dermis 4. Sweat glands: • secrete waste • regulate heat • produces ear wax • produces milk during lactation
Sweat glands • Entire skin surface except nipples and part of external genitalia • Prevent overheating • 500 cc to 12 l/day! (is mostly water) • Humans most efficient (only mammals have) • Produced in response to stress as well as heat
Types of sweat glands • Eccrine or merocrine • Most numerous • True sweat: 99% water, some salts, traces of waste • Open through pores • Apocrine • Axillary, anal and genital areas only • Ducts open into hair follices • The organic molecules in it decompose with time - odor • Modified apocrine glands • Ceruminous – secrete earwax • Mammary – secrete milk
Types of sweat glands • Eccrine or merocrine • Most numerous • True sweat: 99% water, some salts, traces of waste • Open through pores • Apocrine • Axillary, anal and genital areas only • Ducts open into hair follices • The organic molecules in it decompose with time - odor • Modified apocrine glands • Ceruminous – secrete earwax • Mammary – secrete milk
Accessory Organs of the Dermis 5. Blood vessels – to nourish skin cells
Subcutaneous Accessory Organs of the Dermis 6. Nerves – to send and receive messages
subcutaneous Accessory Organs of the Dermis 7. Erector pilli muscle -smooth muscle -causes “goosebumps” -causes hair to stand erect
Subcutaneous layer – connective tissue Anchors dermis to the body Contains fat cells to protect and cushion Subcutaneous layer
Some disorders of the integumentary system • Burns • Threat to life • Catastrophic loss of body fluids • Dehydration and fatal circulatory shock • Infection • Types • First degree – epidermis: redness (e.g. sunburn) • Second degree – epidermis and upper dermis: blister • Third degree - full thickness • Infections • Skin cancer
Disorders of the integumentary system • Burns • Threat to life • Catastrophic loss of body fluids • Dehydration and fatal circulatory shock • Infection • Types • First degree – epidermis: redness (e.g. sunburn) • Second degree – epidermis and upper dermis: blister • Third degree - full thickness • Infections • Skin cancer
Interesting Tidbits • Your body is composed of approximately 100 Trillion cells • About 16% of your body weight is skin • The skin is completely renewed every 27 days • You will make almost 1000 new skins in a lifetime • If all the layers of your skin were laid out on the ground, it would cover about 20 m2 or 2 parking spaces
Interesting Tidbits • A fingernail or toenail takes about 6 months to grow from base to tip • Fingernails grow faster than toenails • An average human scalp has 100,000 hairs • We lose between 40 and 100 hairs per day • Blondes have more hair than brunettes
Interesting Tidbits • Fingerprints provide traction for grasping objects • Even identical twins have different fingerprints • Every square inch of dermis contains twenty feet of blood vessels • Skin on our hands and feet is thicker. When we bathe, skin takes on water and swells slightly. • In the thicker areas, increased surface area creates crowding. The skin must wrinkle to accommodate the changes
Interesting Tidbits • Friction of the epidermis causes cell division to increase. • This outward thickening is called a callous. • Sometimes growth is inward, creating a corn. • Humans shed about 600,000 particles of skin per hour – about 1.5 pounds per year. • At age 70, you will have lost about 105 lbs of skin.