Integumentary System
Sebum
Oily holocrine secretion. Bactericidal. Softens hair and skin.
The Skin
1.5-4.0 millimeters (mm), composed of two distinct regions, the epidermis and dermis
Dermis (b)
The second major skin region, is strong flexible connective tissue. Its cells are fibroblast, macrophages and occasional mast cells. Richly supplied with nerve fibers, blood vessels, and lymphatic vessels. Has two layers, papillary and reticular layers
Body temperature regulation
~500 ml/day of routine insensible perspiration (at normal body temperature). At elevated temperature, dilation of dermal vessels and increased sweat gland activity (sensible perspirations) cool the body.
Functions of Integumentary System
1. Protection 2. Body Temperature Regulation 3. Cutaneous Sensation 4. Metabolic Functions 5. Blood Reservoir 6. Excretion
Stratum Corneum (Horny Layer)
20 to 40 cell layers of dead, flat keratinized, membranous sacs, accounts for up to 3/4s of epidermal thickness. Functions: Protects from abrasion and penetration, Waterproofs, Barrier against biological, chemical, and physical assaults
Cortex
A bulky layer surrounding the medulla, consists of several layers of flattened cells
Reticular Layer
Accounts for 80% of the thickness of the dermis, it is coarse, irregularly arranged, and dense fibrous connective tissue. Collagen fibers provide strength and resiliency, Elastic fibers provide stretch-recoil properties.
Sweat Glands
Aka sudoriferous glands, are distributed all over the body, except nipples and parts of external genetelia. up to 3 million per person. Two types of glands, eccrine and apocrine.
Stratum Lucidum (Clear Layer)
Appears as a clear translucent band just above the stratum granuosum. 2 to 3 rows of flat, dead keratinocytes.
Apocrine Sweat Glands
Approx. 2000 of them are confined in axillary and anogenital areas. Release product by exocytosis. They are larger and lie deeper in the dermis, and ducts empty into hair follicles. Sebum: sweat + fatty substances and proteins. Functional from puberty onward (as sexual scent glands?)
Merkel or Tactile Cells
Are present at the epidermal-dermal junction. Shaped like a spiky hemisphere. Each cell is associated with a disclike sensory nerve ending. (touch receptors)
Epidermal Dendritic Cells
Arise from bone marrow and migrate to the epidermis. Also called Langerhans cells. Functions: they ingest foreign substances and are key activators of the immune system.
Epidermis
Composed of epithelial cells, is the outermost protective shield of the body. A keratinized stratified squamous epithelium consisting of 4 distinct cell types and 4 or 5 distinct layers.
Dermal Papillae
Contain Capillary loops, Meissner's corpuscles (touch receptors), Free nerve endings (pain receptors). Indent overlying epidermis.
Stratum Basale (Basale Layer)
Deepest epidermal layer firmly attached to the dermis, Single row of stem cells, Also called stratum germinativum: cells undergo rapid division, Journey from basal layer to surface Takes 25-45 days, 10 - 25% made of melanocytes
Third Degree Burns
Entire thickness of skin damaged. Gray-white, cherry red, or black. No initial edema or pain (nerve endings destroyed). Skin grafting usually necessary.
Second Degree Burns
Epidermal and upper dermal damage. Blisters appear.
First Degree Burns
Epidermal damage only, Localized redness, edema (swelling), and pain.
Outermost Cuticle
Formed from a single layer of cells that overlap one another from below the shingles on a roof. Provides strength and helps keep inner layers tightly compacted.
Hair Growth
Growth phase (weeks to years) followed by regressive stage and resting phase (1-3 months), Growth phase varies (6-10 years in scalp, 3-4 months in eyebrows)
Name the cells of the Epidermis
Keratinocytes, Melanocytes, Epidermal Dendritic cells (Langerhans' cells), and Merkel or tactile cells.
Melanin
Made in the skin. A polymer made of tryosine amino acids. Range in colors from yellow to tan to reddish-brown to black. Its synthesis depends on an enzyme in melanocytes called tyrosinase and it passes from malanocytes to the basal keratinocytes.
Keratinocytes
Main role is to produce keratin, the fibrous protein that helps give the epidermis its protective properties.
Dermis
Makes up the bulk of the skin, is a tough leathery layer composed mostly of fibrous connective tissue. Only the dermis is vascularized.
Ceruminous Glands
Modified specialized apocrine glands found in the lining of the external ear canal. Secretion mixes with sebum and produces cerumen or earwax.
Melanoma
Most dangerous. Involves melanocytes. Highly metastatic and resistant to chemotherapy. Treated by wide surgical excision accompanied by immunotherapy. Characteristics (ABCD rule) A: Asymmetry; the two sides of the pigmented area do not match B: Border exhibits indentations C: Color is black, brown, tan, and sometimes red or blue D: Diameter is larger than 6 mm (size of a pencil eraser)
Skin Cancer
Most skin tumors are benign (do not metastasize). Risk factors: overexposure to UV radiation, frequent irritation of the skin. Some skin lotions contain enzymes in liposomes that can fix damaged DNA. 3 types: Basal Cell Carcinoma, Squamous Cell Carcinoma, Melanoma
How do the structures of the integumentary system relate to its functions?
Outer layer - epidermis has keratinized protective layer; second layer- dermis has secretion glands, blood vessels, hair follicles and receptors; third layer - subcutaneous has fatty cushion.
Hair or Pili
Produced by hair follicles, consists of dead keratinized cells. 3 Layers of keratinized cells (medulla, cortex, cuticle) Functions: Alerting the body to presence of insects on the skin, guards scalp against physical trauma, heat loss, and sunlight Distribution: Entire surface except palms, soles, lips, nipples, and portions of external genitalia. Contains hard keratin; more durable than soft keratin of skin Hair pigments: melanins (yellow, rust brown, black) Gray/white hair: decreased melanin production, increased air bubbles in shaft
How do the structures of the integumentary system work together to maintain homeostasis in the body?
Provides protection, regulation of body temperature (sweat or shiver), sensory reception, water balance, synthesis of vitamins and hormones and absorption of materials.
Nail
Scalelike modification of the epidermis on the distal, dorsal surface of fingers and toes.
Squamous Cell Carcinoma
Second most common, Involves keratinocytes of stratum spinosum. Most common on scalp, ears, lower lip, and hands. Good prognosis if treated by radiation therapy or removed surgically.
Mammary Glands
Secrete milk
Eccrine Sweat Glands
Secreting glands, are far more numerous and are abundant on palms, soles of feet and forehead. Each is a simple, coiled, tubular gland. Ducts connect to pores. Sweat: 99% water, NaCl, vitamin C, antibodies, dermcidin and metabolic wastes.
Hair follicle receptor (root hair plexus)
Sensory nerve endings around each hair bulb. Stimulated by bending a hair
Stratum Spinosum (Prickly Layer)
Several cell layers thick, cells contain a weblike system of intermediate prekeratin filaments attached to desmosomes. Keratinocytes appear to have spines and are scattered among abundant melanin granules and Langerhans' cells.
Sebaceous (Oil) Glands
Simple branched alveolar glands that are found all over the body except in the thick skin of palms and soles. Small on body trunk and limbs but large on face neck and upper chest. Secrete oily substance called sebum. Most develop from hair follicles, Become active at puberty.
Name the organs that are involved in the integumentary system.
Skin, hair, nails, and sebaceous (sweat and oil) glands
Arrector pili
Smooth muscle attached to follicle, Responsible for "goose bumps"
Layers of the Epidermis (b)
Superficial to deep: Stratum Corneum, Stratum Lucidum, Stratum Granulosum, Stratum Spinosum and Stratum Basale. MNEUMONIC: Cora, Luci's Grandma, Spins Baseballs.
Metabolic Functions
Synthesis of vitamin D precursor and collagenase Chemical conversion of carcinogens and some hormones.
Cutaneous Sensations
Temperature, touch, and pain
Blood Reservoir
The dermal vascular supply can hold up to 5% of body's blood volume.
Name the Appendages of the Skin
The nails, sweat glands, sebaceous (oil) glands, hair follicles and hair.
Hemoglobin
The pinkish hue of fair skin, refects oxygenated hemoglobin in the blood cells circulating through dermal capillaries.
What is the Integumentary System
The skin -- a complex set of organs that covers and protects body.
Melanocytes
The spider-shaped epithelial cells that synthesize the pigment melanin, are found in the deepest layer of the epidermis. As melanin is made it is accumulated in membrane bound granules called melanosomes, that are moved along actin filaments by motor proteins to the ends of melanocytes processes. from there taken up by keratinocytes. Accumulate in superficial side of keratinocyte nucleus. (All humans have same number of melanocytes)
Hypodermis (Superficial Fascia)
The subcutaneous tissue deep to the skin. It is not part of the skin, but it shares some of the skins protective functions. It is superficial to the tough connective tissue wrapping (fascia) of the skeletal muscles, consists mostly of adipose tissue. Functions: Anchors the skin to the underlying structures (mostly muscle), acts as a shock absorber.
Layers of the Epidermis
Thick skin which covers the palms, fingertips, and soles of feet; Epidermis consists of 5 layers, or strata (bed sheets); superficial to deep: Stratum Corneum, Stratum Lucidum, Stratum Granulosum, Stratum Spinosum and Stratum Basale.
Stratum Granuosum (Granular Layer)
Thin layer that consists of 3 to 5 layers in which keratinocyte appearance changes drastically and the process of keratinization (in which the cells fill with the protein keratin) begins. Keratohyaline help form keratin in upper layers, and lamellated granules spew a water resistent glycolipid into the extracellular space slowing water loss across epidermis making the outter skin more tough.
Papillary Layer
Thin superficial layer is aerolar connective tissue, with fine interlaced mat of loosely woven collegen and elastic fibers. Has superior surface callled dermal papillae.
Skin Color
Three pigments contribute to skin color: melanin, carotene, and hemoglobin.
Protection
Three types of barriers: 1. Chemical (Low pH secretions (acid mantle) and defensins retard bacterial activity) 2. Physical/Mechanical (Keratin and glycolipids block most water and water- soluble substances limite penetration of skin by lipid-soluble substances, plant oleoresins (e.g., poison ivy), organic solvents, salts of heavy metals, some drugs) 3. Biological (Dendritic cells, macrophages, and DNA)
Rules of Nines
Used to estimate the volume of fluid loss from burns.
Name the functions of the integumentary system
Waterproof, cushion, protect the deeper tissues, excrete waste, regulate temperature, provide sensory input and synthesize vitamin D.
Carotene
Yellow to orange pigment, that tends to accumulate in the stratum corneum and in fatty tissue of the hypodermis. Its color is most obvious in palms and soles of feet, where stratum corneum is the thickest.
Basal Cell Carcinoma
Least malignant, most common, Stratum basale cells proliferate and slowly invade dermis and hypodermis, Cured by surgical excision in 99% of cases.
Excretion
Limited amounts of nitrogenous wastes and salt are eliminated in sweat.
Hair Follicles
Longitudinal view of the hair bulb in the follicle from the epidermal surface into dermis. Two-layered wall: outer connective tissue root sheath, inner epithelial root sheath, Hair bulb: expanded deep end