230 likes | 435 Views
Ageing Skin Dr Bill Revell. AGEING Process of progressive generalised impairment of function Resulting in an increasing age- specific death rate Tom Kirkwood. Ageing. Results from accumulation of un-repaired damage of somatic cells and tissues
E N D
AgeingSkinDr Bill Revell • AGEING • Process of progressive generalised impairment of function • Resulting in an increasing age- specific death rate • Tom Kirkwood
Ageing • Results from accumulation of un-repaired damage of somatic cells and tissues • Progressive failure of maintenance mechanisms to respond to environmental attrition • Free radical damage may offer a unifying theory for cellular senescence, underlying human ageing and age related diseases
Deteriorating Tissue Function • Associated with change in cell functioning • +/- Change in cell turnover when old or defective cells are not replaced
age related changes in metabolic functions • Reduced oxidative phosphorylation by mitochondria • Diminished synthesis of structural, enzymatic and regulatory proteins • Decreased capacity for uptake of nutrients • Increased DNA damage and diminished repair of chromosomal damage • Accumulation of oxidative damage in proteins and lipids (eg lipofuscin pigment) • Accumulation of advanced glycosylation end products
Morphological alterations • Irregular and abnormally lobed nuclei • Swollen, pleomorphic and vacuolated mitochondria • Decreased endoplasmic reticulum • Distorted Golgi apparatus
Ageing skin; a preamble………. • Huge efforts to hide and disguise • Gerontological discussion has little to do with morbidity or mortality; very few patients die of old skin, or succumb to skin failure • Importance is primarily psychological • Emotional impact of skin ageing should not be underestimated
Ageing skin • Wrinkled • Most pronounced on sun exposed parts • Age or liver spots • Loss of hair • Sagging facial muscles • Increased fragility • Skin contains less collagen and elastin; abnormal
changes to collagen and elastin • Thinner; less elastin; less collagen • Abnormal elastin and collagen • Wrinkling; most pronounced on sun-exposed skin
Collagen Cross Links • Eg intermolecular cross links between lysine residues in adjacent collagen helices • Non-reducible cross links increase with age • Arise as a side effect of free radical damage
Advanced Glycosylation End Products • Post-translational modification of collagen by sugar (AGE products) • Non-enzymatic attachment of glucose to proteins • Formation of irreversible cross links
Age related changes – “normal” ageingEpidermis • Epidermis thinner • Increased “scaling off” • Declining rate of cell division • Decrease in dermal papillae • Decrease in “interdigitation” • epidermis held less tightly • Looser feel of ageing skin • By age 80yr keratinocyte turnover in epidermis slows to 50%
Age related changes – “normal” ageingDermis • Reduction in fibroblast numbers • Less matrix turnover • Dermis thins more than epidermis (transparency) • Collagenous fibres become larger and coarser • Fat, water, matrix content diminishes • Elastic fibres less resilient • Formation of cross links; some calcification • Skin less able to “smooth out” • Wrinkles • Loss of smooth padding provided by fat cells of the hypodermis
Age related changes – “normal” ageingDermis • Reduction in sweat glands and sebaceous glands • Gradual atrophy • Sweat less; drier and scaly skin • Reduced ability to regulate body temperature • Heat exhaustion more likely • Generalised reduction of blood flow to skin • Skin surface cooler; slow growth of hair and nails • Nails yellowish, ridged, thicker with Ca2+ deposits • Decrease in hair follicles, loss of body hair • cf (males) eyebrow, nostril, ear hair becomes coarse and grow more rapidly • Reduced hair pigment – grey/white is default colour
Age related changes – “normal” ageingHypodermis • Layer of loose connective tissue, containing fat • Subcutaneous tissue; not part of skin (technically) • …. but changes affect skin…. • Generalised loss of fat; most obvious in face and limbs • Major cause of wrinkles • “old age is when, upon getting out of the bath, you notice the full length mirror is steamed up – and you are glad of it” (Modern Maturity)
Age related changes – “normal” ageingHypodermis • Loss of subcutaneous fat also loss of padding • Combine with reduction of blood supply to skin • Bed sores in areas of constant pressure over bony prominences • Loss of fat • Diminished insulation; allows heat to escape • Need to keep rooms warmer than young people can tolerate
“Age” or “liver spots” • Intrinsic – resulting from the ageing process • Resulting from UV damage: photo-ageing • dermatoheliosis • Free radical damage • Lipofuscin deposition in cells, often in secretary cells of sweat glands • End product of lipid peroxidation
SenileFRECKLESinvolving melanocytes • pigmented area (melanin) surrounded by normal-appearing skin. • melanocytes are present; may be increased in number • may evolve slowly over years, or may be eruptive and appear suddenly • Pigmentation may be homogeneous or variegated, with a colour ranging from brown to black. cf solar LENTIGO
Age related dysfunctions • Senile angiomas • 75% >70yr • Elevated clusters of dilated capillaries • Seborrheic keratosis • Benign epidermal tumours • Greasy wart-like crust often forms on surface of tumours • Senile pruritis (itching) • Loss of oil secreting sebaceous gland • Dry, less pliant skin; cracks • Deep fissures that exude tissue fluid
Viral disease Peak incidence 50-70yrs Varicella (chicken pox) when young Remains dormant in nervous system When reactivated, attacks sensory nerve fibres and skin supplied by nerves Itching, red papules, fluid filled vesicles, dries down and forms crust, scales off, leaving pigmented area 1 – 2 weeks, pain for months Herpes Zoster(shingles)
Skin Cancerscancers of all types increase with age • Melanoma – most serious • Associated with sun UV light • Develops in pigment cells (melanocytes) of a pre-existing epidermal mole
Non-melanoma skin cancers >50%pink, red or white • Basal cell carcinoma • Most common • Develops from cells in basal layer of epidermis • Most common in regions with strong sunlight • Most prevalent in light skinned races • Head and neck usually • Rarely metastasise • Variously reddish patches; small open sores; bumps • Growths can invade underlying tissue
Non-melanoma skin cancers • Squamous cell carcinoma • Less common • Associated with excessive sun exposure • More common in elderly, esp. older men • Appears as a wart • Often in form of hard nodule, with small reddened areas showing through surface • May be ulcerous