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Lecture 03 Integumentary System

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Lecture 03 Integumentary System * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Burns Destruction of proteins of the skin chemicals, electricity, heat Problems that result shock due to ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Lecture 03 Integumentary System


1
Lecture 03Integumentary System
2
  • Integumentary System Skin accessory organs
  • Cutaneous membrane
  • Epidermis epithelial tissue
  • Dermis connective tissue
  • Accessory Structures
  • Glands
  • Hair (hair follicles)
  • Nails
  • Deep to skin not part of skin
  • Hypodermis subcutaneous (subQ) superficial
    fascia

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Overview of Epidermis
  • Keratinized, stratified squamous epithelium
  • Contains no blood vessels
  • 4 types of cells
  • 4-5 distinct strata (layers) of cells
  • Thick vs. thin skin

6
  • Thick and Thin Skin
  • Thick palms, soles
  • Thin everywhere else lacks Stratum lucidum
  • Hair folicles
  • Sebaceous glands
  • Sparser sensory receptors
  • Lacks epidermal ridges

7
Cells of the Epidermis
Melanocytes manufacture melanin- in Stratum
Spinosum
Keratinocytes most abundant, undergo
keratinization
  • Langerhans cells macrophages which originate in
    bone marrow - in Stratum Spinosum
  • Merkel associated with sensory neurons

8
Layers (Strata) of the Epidermis
  • Stratum corneum
  • Stratum lucidum
  • Stratum granulosum
  • Stratum spinosum
  • Stratum basale
  • not in thin skin

9
Layers of Epidermis
  • Stratum germinativum
  • Stratum spinosum
  • Stratum granulosum
  • Stratum lucidum
  • Stratum corneum
  • Cell division, pigmentation, cuboidal
  • 8-10 rows deep, many sides kerationcytes
  • Cells dying, waterpoofing
  • Clear, flattened, dead, fingertips only
  • 25-30 rows deep, flattened, dead

10
Skin Color
  • Determined primarily by melanin produced by
    melanocytes physiologic condition
  • Two forms
  • Phoemelanin which gives a yellow-red color to
    skin
  • Eumelanin gives a black-brown color to skin
  • Also by carotene which interacts with eumelanin
    in Asian populations
  • Albinism/vitiligo lack of pigment all/patches

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  • Diagnostic Clues Skin Color
  • Jaundice
  • yellowish color to skin and whites of eyes
  • buildup of yellow bilirubin in blood from liver
    disease
  • Cyanotic
  • bluish color to nail beds and skin
  • hemoglobin depleted of oxygen looks purple-blue
  • Erythema
  • redness of skin due to enlargement of capillaries
    in dermis
  • during inflammation, infection, allergy or burns

13
  • Epidermal Ridges
  • Dermal Papillae projections of dermal layer
  • Form in fetus as epidermis conforms to dermal
    papillae
  • fingerprints are left by sweat glands open on
    ridges
  • increase grip of hand
  • Increase contact between Stratum germinativum

14
  • Dermis
  • Deep to epidermis connective tissue What
    kind(s)?
  • Does not wear away
  • Contains blood vessels, adipose, various
    accessory structures
  • Composed of 2 layers
  • Papillary
  • Reticular

15
Papillary Region
  • Top 20 of dermis
  • Composed of loose connective tissue elastic
    fibers
  • Finger like projections called dermal papillae
  • Functions
  • anchors epidermis to dermis
  • contains capillaries that feed epidermis
  • contains Meissners corpuscles (touch) free
    nerve endings (pain and temperature)

16
Reticular Region
  • Dense irregular connective tissue
  • collagen and elastic fibers
  • aligned in cleavage lines
  • Contains interlacing collagen and elastic fibers
  • Packed with oil glands, sweat gland ducts, fat
    hair follicles
  • Provides strength, extensibility elasticity to
    skin
  • stretch marks are dermal tears from extreme
    stretching

17
Tattoos
  • Ink is injected into the dermis hence the long
    lasting nature of tattoos

18
Accessory Structures of Skin
  • Epidermal derivatives
  • Cells sink inward during development to form
  • hair
  • oil glands
  • sweat glands
  • nails

19
Hair
  • Hair types consisting of keratinized cells
  • Lanugo which develops during fetal development
    and disappears prior to birth
  • Vellus fine hair which cover body
  • Intermediate
  • Terminal hair of the scalp, eyebrows, eyelids
  • Hair develops from follicles which include
  • Oil glands
  • Arrector pili muscles which may pull on the
    follicle to cause the hair to stand on end in
    response to fear or cold
  • Hair root plexus nerve endings surrounding the
    root which make the hair sensitive to touch
  • Hair growth outwards from the matrix, a layer
    of cells in the root

20
Structure of Follicle
  • Shaft -- visible
  • medulla, cortex cuticle
  • CS round in straight hair
  • CS oval in wavy hair
  • Root -- below the surface
  • Follicle surrounds root
  • external root sheath
  • internal root sheath
  • base of follicle is bulb
  • blood vessels
  • germinal cell layer

Follicle
21
Cross section of follicle
22
  • Bulb surrounds papilla
  • Division of cells at matrix results in hair
    growth

23
Hair Related Structures
  • Arrector pili
  • smooth muscle in dermis contracts with cold or
    fear.
  • forms goosebumps as hair is pulled vertically
  • Hair root plexus (network of nerves)
  • detect hair movement
  • Sebaceous Glands
  • Produce oily secretion

24
  • Hair Growth
  • Growth cycle growth stage resting stage
  • Growth stage
  • lasts for 2 to 6 years
  • matrix cells at base of hair root producing
    length
  • Resting stage
  • lasts for 3 months
  • matrix cells inactive follicle atrophies
  • Old hair falls out as growth stage begins again
  • normal hair loss is 70 to 100 hairs per day

25
Hair Color
  • Result of melanin produced in melanocytes in hair
    bulb
  • Dark hair contains true melanin
  • Blond and red hair contain melanin with iron and
    sulfur added
  • Graying hair is result of decline in melanin
    production
  • White hair has air bubbles in the medullary shaft

26
Glands of the Skin
  • Specialized exocrine glands found in dermis
  • Sebaceous (oil) glands
  • Sudiferous (sweat) glands
  • Ceruminous (wax) glands
  • Mammary (milk) glands

27
Sebaceous (oil) glands
  • Secretory portion in the dermis
  • Most open onto hair shafts
  • Sebum
  • combination of cholesterol, proteins, fats
    salts
  • keeps hair and skin from soft pliable
  • inhibits growth of bacteria fungi(ringworm)
  • Acne
  • bacterial inflammation of glands
  • secretions stimulated by hormones at puberty

28
  • Nails
  • Involve free edge which you trim, the body and
    root
  • Growth is from the nail bed specifically from
    the matrix an area proximal to the root
  • Nail is tightly packed, keratinized cells (dead)

29
Structure of Nails
  • Tightly packed keratinized cells
  • Nail body
  • visible portion pink due to underlying
    capillaries
  • free edge appears white
  • Nail root
  • buried under skin layers
  • lunula is white due to thickened stratum basale
  • Cuticle
  • stratum corneum layer

30
  • Nail Growth
  • Nail matrix proximal to nail root produces growth
  • Cells transformed into tightly packed keratinized
    cells
  • 1 mm per week

31
Epidermal Wound Healing
  • Abrasion or minor burn
  • Basal cells migrate across the wound
  • Contact inhibition with other cells stops
    migration
  • Epidermal growth factor stimulates cell division
  • Full thickness of epidermis results from further
    cell division

32
Deep Wound Healing
  • If an injury reaches dermis, healing occurs in 4
    phases
  • inflammatory phase has clot unite wound edges and
    WBCs arrive from dilated and more permeable blood
    vessels
  • migratory phase begins the regrowth of epithelial
    cells and the formation of scar tissue by the
    fibroblasts
  • proliferative phase is a completion of tissue
    formation
  • maturation phase sees the scab fall off
  • Scar formation
  • hypertrophic scar remains within the boundaries
    of the original wound
  • keloid scar extends into previously normal tissue
  • collagen fibers are very dense and fewer blood
    vessels are present so the tissue is lighter in
    color

33
Age Related Structural Changes
  • Collagen fibers decrease in number stiffen
  • Elastic fibers become less elastic
  • Fibroblasts decrease in number
  • Langerhans cells and macrophages decrease in
    number and become less-efficient phagocytes
  • Oil glands shrink and the skin becomes dry
  • Walls of blood vessels in dermis thicken so
    decreased nutrient availability leads to thinner
    skin as subcutaneous fat is lost

34
Burns
  • Destruction of proteins of the skin
  • chemicals, electricity, heat
  • Problems that result
  • shock due to water, plasma and plasma protein
    loss
  • circulatory kidney problems from loss of plasma
  • bacterial infection

35
  • Types of Burns
  • First-degree
  • only epidermis (sunburn)
  • Second-degree burn
  • destroys entire epidermis part of dermis
  • fluid-filled blisters separate epidermis dermis
  • epidermal derivatives are not damaged
  • heals without grafting in 3 to 4 weeks may scar
  • Third-degree or full-thickness
  • destroy epidermis, dermis epidermal derivatives
  • damaged area is numb due to loss of sensory nerves

36
Skin Grafts
  • New skin can not regenerate if stratum basale and
    its stem cells are destroyed
  • Skin graft is covering of wound with piece of
    healthy skin
  • autograft from self
  • isograft from twin
  • autologous skin
  • transplantation of patients skin grown in culture

37
Transdermal Drug Administration
  • Method by which drugs in a patch enter the body
  • Drug absorption most rapid in areas where skin is
    thin (scrotum, face and scalp)
  • Examples
  • nitroglycerin (prevention of chest pain from
    coronary artery disease)
  • scopolamine ( motion sickness)
  • estradiol (estrogen replacement therapy)
  • nicotine (stop smoking alternative)

38
  • THINGS TO WORRY ABOUT
  • Your Pores Portals for Invasion?
  • Musty Dankness
  • Fleas Ticks Tiny TerroristsWhat's Embedded
    in Your Bed?
  • What Your Mother Never Told You About Those
    Hidden Corners and Cracks
  • Pink Mold Slime or Scourge?Mildew Mold's
    Evil Twin
  • AND

39
  • What is the difference between thick and thin
    skin?
  • Where does each occur?
  • What are the layers of the epidermis?
  • of the dermis?
  • What kind of tissue is found in each?
  • How do nails form?
  • Sketch a hair follicle how does a hair grow?
  • What is a sebaceous gland what is the purpose
    of their secretions?
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