Title: Integumentary System
1Integumentary System
- The skin and related structures
2Functions 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 bodys blood
3Layers 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
4Epidermis (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)
5Epidermal 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
6Epidermal Layers
7Dermis
- 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)
8Dermal 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
9Appendages of the skin
- Sudoriferous (sweat glands)
- Sebaceous (oil) glands
- Hair
- Nails
10Sudoriferous 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
11Other Sudoriferous Glands
- Ceruminous glands
- Make cerumen (earwax)
- Mammary glands
- Produce milk in females
12Sebaceous (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
13Hair
- 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
14Hair 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
15Homeostatic Imbalances of the Skin
- Skin cancers (3 main types)
- Burns (1st, 2nd, and 3rd)
16Genes that Control Cell Division
- Proto-Oncogenes
- Initiate mitosis (accelerator)
- Tumor suppressor
- genes
- Inhibit mitosis (brake)
mutations must occur to both types of genes for
cancer to develop
17Skin 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
-
18Skin 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) -
19Skin Cancers
- Melanoma
- metastasizes (spreads) quickly/ highest mortality
rate - Appears as spreading brown/black patch
- one-third of cases arise from pre-existing moles
-
20Self-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)
21Second 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
22Third 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