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The Integumentary System

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Title: The Integumentary System


1
Chapter 5
  • The Integumentary System
  • Lecture Outline

2
INTRODUCTION
  • The skin and its accessory structures make up the
    integumentary system.
  • The integumentary system functions to guard the
    bodys physical and biochemical integrity,
    maintain a constant body temperature, and provide
    sensory information about the surrounding
    environment.

3
Chapter 5The Integumentary System
  • Skin and its accessory structures
  • structure
  • function
  • growth and repair
  • development
  • aging
  • disorders

4
General Anatomy
  • A large organ composed of all 4 tissue types
  • 22 square feet
  • 1-2 mm thick
  • Weight 10 lbs.

5
STRUCTURE OF THE SKIN (Figure 5.1)
  • The superficial portion of the skin is the
    epidermis and is composed of epithelial tissue.
  • The deeper layer of the skin is the dermis and is
    primarily composed of connective tissue.
  • Deep to the dermis is the subcutaneous layer or
    hypodermis. (not a part of the skin)
  • It consists of areolar and adipose tissue.
  • fat storage, an area for blood vessel passage,
    and an area of pressure-sensing nerve endings.

6
Overview of Epidermis
  • Stratified squamous epithelium
  • avascular (contains no blood vessels)
  • 4 types of cells
  • 5 distinct strata (layers) of cells

7
Four Principle Cells of the Epidermis Figure 5.2
  • keratinocytes (Figure 5.2a)
  • produce the protein keratin, which helps protect
    the skin and underlying tissue from heat,
    microbes, and chemicals, and lamellar granules,
    which release a waterproof sealant
  • melanocytes (Figure 5.2b)
  • produce the pigment melanin which contributes to
    skin color and absorbs damaging ultraviolet (UV)
    light
  • Langerhans cells (Figure 5.2c)
  • derived from bone marrow
  • participate in immune response
  • Merkel cells (Figure 5.2d)
  • contact a sensory structure called a tactile
    (Merkel) disc and function in the sensation of
    touch

8
Layers of the Epidermis
  • There are four or five layers of the epidermis,
    depending upon the degree of friction and
    mechanical pressure applied to the skin.
  • From deepest to most superficial the layers of
    the epidermis are (Figures 5.3 a and b).
  • stratum basale (stratum germinativum)
  • stratum spinosum
  • stratum granulosum
  • stratum lucidum (only in palms and soles)
  • stratum corneum

9
Layers (Strata) of the Epidermis
  • Stratum corneum
  • Stratum lucidum
  • Stratum granulosum
  • Stratum spinosum
  • Stratum basale

10
Stratum Basale (stratum germinativum)
  • Deepest single layer of epidermis
  • merkel cells, melanocytes, keratinocytes stem
    cells that divide repeatedly
  • keratinocytes have a cytoskeleton of
    tonofilaments
  • Cells attached to each other to basement
    membrane by desmosomes hemi-desmosomes
  • When the germinal portion of the epidermis is
    destroyed, new skin cannot regenerate with a skin
    graft.

11
Stratum Spinosum (Figure 5.2a)
  • provides strength and flexibility to the skin
  • 8 to 10 cell layers are held together by
    desmosomes.
  • During slide preparation, cells shrink and appear
    spiny (where attached to other cells by
    desmosomes.)
  • Melanin is taken in by keratinocytes (by
    phagocytosis) from nearby melanocytes.

12
Stratum Granulosum
  • transition between the deeper, metabolically
    active strata and the dead cells of the more
    superficial strata
  • 3-5 layers of flat dying cells that show nuclear
    degeneration
  • example of apoptosis
  • Contain lamellar granules that release lipid that
    repels water
  • Contain dark-staining keratohyalin granules
  • keratohyalin converts tonofilaments into keratin

13
Stratum Lucidum
  • present only in the fingers tips, palms of the
    hands, and soles of the feet.
  • Three to five layers of clear, flat, dead cells
  • Contains precursor of keratin

14
Stratum Corneum
  • 25 to 30 layers of flat dead cells filled with
    keratin and surrounded by lipids
  • continuously shed
  • Barrier to light, heat, water, chemicals
    bacteria
  • Lamellar granules in this layer make it
    water-repellent.
  • Constant exposure to friction will cause this
    layer to increase in depth with the formation of
    a callus, an abnormal thickening of the
    epidermis.

15
Keratinization and Growth of the Epidermis
  • Stem cells divide to produce keratinocytes
  • As keratinocytes are pushed up towards the
    surface, they fill with keratin
  • Keratinization is replacement of cell contents
    with the protein keratin occurs as cells move to
    the skin surface over 2-4 weeks.
  • Epidermal growth factor (EGF) and other
    hormone-like proteins play a role in epidermal
    growth.
  • Table 5.1 presents a summary of the features of
    the epidermal strata.

16
Clinical Application
  • Psoriasis is a chronic skin disorder
    characterized by a more rapid division and
    movement of keratinocytes through the epidermal
    strata .
  • cells shed in 7 to 10 days as flaky silvery
    scales
  • abnormal keratin produced
  • Skin Grafts
  • New skin can not regenerate if stratum basale and
    its stem cells are destroyed
  • autograft covering of wound with piece of
    healthy skin from self
  • isograft is from twin
  • autologous skin
  • transplantation of patients skin after it has
    grown in culture

17
Dermis (Figure 5.1)
  • Connective tissue layer composed of collagen
    elastic fibers, fibroblasts, macrophages fat
    cells
  • Contains hair follicles, glands, nerves blood
    vessels
  • Two major regions of dermis
  • papillary region
  • reticular region

18
Dermis - Papillary Region
  • Top 20 of dermis
  • areolar connective tissue containing fine elastic
    fibers, corpuscles of touch (Meissners
    corpuscles), adipose cells, hair follicles,
    sebaceous glands, sudoriferous glands
  • The collagen and elastic fibers provide strength,
    extensibility (ability to stretch), and
    elasticity (ability to return to original shape
    after stretching) to skin.
  • Finger like projections are called dermal
    papillae
  • anchors epidermis to dermis
  • contains capillaries that feed epidermis
  • contains Meissners corpuscles (touch) free
    nerve endings for sensations of heat, cold, pain,
    tickle, and itch

19
Dermis - Reticular Region
  • Dense irregular connective tissue
  • 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
  • Epidermal ridges form in fetus as epidermis
    conforms to dermal papillae
  • fingerprints are left by sweat glands open on
    ridges
  • increase grip of hand

20
Dermis -- Structure
  • Epidermal ridges increase friction for better
    grasping ability and provide the basis for
    fingerprints and footprints. The ridges typically
    reflect contours of the underlying dermis.
  • Lines of cleavage in the skin indicate the
    predominant direction of the underlying collagen
    fibers. Knowledge of these lines is especially
    important to plastic surgeons.
  • Table 5.2 presents a comparison of the structural
    features of the papillary and reticular regions
    of the dermis.

21
Tattoos
  • Tattooing is a permanent coloration of the skin
    in which a foreign pigment is injected into the
    dermis.

22
Basis of Skin Color
  • The color of skin and mucous membranes can
    provide clues for diagnosing certain problems,
    such as
  • Jaundice
  • yellowish color to skin and whites of eyes
  • buildup of yellow bilirubin in blood from liver
    disease
  • Cyanosis
  • 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

23
Skin Color Pigments
  • Melanin produced in epidermis by melanocytes
  • melanocytes convert tyrosine to melanin
  • UV in sunlight increases melanin production
  • same number of melanocytes in everyone, but
    differing amounts of pigment produced
  • results vary from yellow to tan to black color
  • Clinical observations
  • freckles or liver spots melanocytes in a patch
  • albinism inherited lack of tyrosinase no
    pigment
  • vitiligo autoimmune loss of melanocytes in
    areas of the skin produces white patches
  • The wide variety of colors in skin is due to
    three pigments - melanin, carotene, and
    hemoglobin (in blood in capillaries) - in the
    dermis.

24
Skin Color Pigments
  • Carotene in dermis
  • yellow-orange pigment (precursor of vitamin A)
  • found in stratum corneum dermis
  • Hemoglobin
  • red, oxygen-carrying pigment in blood cells
  • if other pigments are not present, epidermis is
    translucent so pinkness will be evident

25
Accessory Structures of Skin
  • develop from the embryonic epidermis
  • Cells sink inward during development to form
  • hair
  • oil glands
  • sweat glands
  • nails

26
HAIR
  • Hairs, or pili, are present on most skin surfaces
    except the palms, palmar surfaces of the digits,
    soles, and plantar surfaces of the digits.
  • Hair consists of
  • a shaft above the surface (Figure 5.5a)
  • a root that penetrates the dermis and
    subcutaneous layer (Figure 5.5c,d)
  • the cuticle (Figure 5.5b), and
  • a hair follicle (Figure 5.5c,d).
  • New hairs develop from cell division of the
    matrix in the bulb.

27
Structure of Hair
  • 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

28
Structure of Hair
  • 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

29
Structure of Hair
  • 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

30
Hair Related Structures
  • Arrector pili
  • smooth muscle in dermis contracts with cold or
    fear.
  • forms goosebumps as hair is pulled vertically
  • Hair root plexus
  • detect hair movement
  • sebaceous (oil) glands

31
Types of hair
  • Lanugo is a fine, nonpigmented hair that covers
    the fetus.
  • Vellus hair is a short, fine hair that replaces
    lanugo
  • Course pigmented hair appears in response to
    androgens
  • Hair that appears in response to androgens and
    hair of the head, eyelashes and eyebrows is known
    as terminal hair.

32
Hair removal
  • Depilatories dissolve the protein in the hair
    shaft
  • Electrolysis uses an electric current to destroy
    the hair matrix.

33
Hair Growth
  • The hair growth cycle consists of a growing stage
    and a resting stage.
  • 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
  • Both rate of growth and the replacement cycle can
    be altered by illness, diet, high fever, surgery,
    blood loss, severe emotional stress, and gender.
  • Chemotherapeutic agents affect the rapidly
    dividing matrix hair cells resulting in hair loss.

34
Hair Color
  • Hair color is due primarily to the amount and
    type of melanin.
  • Graying of hair occurs because of a progressive
    decline in tyrosinase.
  • 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
  • Hormones influence the growth and loss of hair
    (Clinical applications).

35
Functions of Hair
  • Prevents heat loss
  • Decreases sunburn
  • Eyelashes help protect eyes
  • Touch receptors (hair root plexus) senses light
    touch

36
Glands of the Skin
  • Specialized exocrine glands found in dermis
  • Sebaceous (oil) glands
  • Sudiferous (sweat) glands
  • Ceruminous (wax) glands
  • Mammary (milk) glands

37
Sebaceous (oil) glands
  • Sebaceous (oil) glands are usually connected to
    hair follicles they are absent in the palms and
    soles (Figures 5.1 and 5.6a).
  • Secretory portion of gland is located in the
    dermis
  • produce sebum
  • contains cholesterol, proteins, fats salts
  • moistens hairs
  • waterproofs and softens the skin
  • inhibits growth of bacteria fungi (ringworm)
  • Acne
  • bacterial inflammation of glands
  • secretions are stimulated by hormones at puberty

38
Sudoriferous (sweat) glands
  • Eccrine sweat glands have an extensive
    distribution most areas of skin
  • secretory portion is in dermis with duct to
    surface
  • ducts terminate at pores at the surface of the
    epidermis (Figure 5.6b).
  • regulate body temperature through evaporation
    (perspiration)
  • help eliminate wastes such as urea.
  • Apocrine sweat glands are limited in distribution
    to the skin of the axilla, pubis, and areolae
    their duct open into hair follicles (Figure
    5.6c).
  • secretory portion in dermis
  • duct that opens onto hair follicle
  • secretions are more viscous
  • Table 5.3 compares eccrine and apocrine sweat
    glands.

39
Ceruminous Glands
  • Ceruminous glands are modified sudoriferous
    glands that produce a waxy substance called
    cerumen.
  • found in the external auditory meatus
  • contains secretions of oil and wax glands
  • barrier for entrance of foreign bodies
  • An abnormal amount of cerumen in the external
    auditory meatus or canal can result in impaction
    and prevent sound waves from reaching the ear
    drum (Clinical Application).

40
Structure of Nails (Figure 5.7)
  • 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
  • Eponychium (cuticle)
  • stratum corneum layer

41
Nail Growth
  • Nail matrix is below nail root -- produces growth
  • Cells transformed into tightly packed keratinized
    cells
  • 1 mm per week
  • Certain nail conditions may indicate disease
    (Figure 5.8)

42
TYPES OF SKIN
  • Thin skin
  • covers all parts of the body except for the palms
    and palmar surfaces of the digits and toes.
  • lacks epidermal ridges
  • has a sparser distribution of sensory receptors
    than thick skin.
  • Thick skin (0.6 to 4.5 mm)
  • covers the palms, palmar surfaces of the digits,
    and soles
  • features a stratum lucidum and thick epidermal
    ridges
  • lacks hair follicles, arrector pili muscles, and
    sebaceous glands, and has more sweat glands than
    thin skin.
  • Table 5.4 summarizes the fractures of thin and
    thick skin.

43
FUNCTIONS OF SKIN -- thermoregulation
  • Perspiration its evaporation
  • lowers body temperature
  • flow of blood in the dermis is adjusted
  • Exercise
  • in moderate exercise, more blood brought to
    surface helps lower temperature
  • with extreme exercise, blood is shunted to
    muscles and body temperature rises
  • Shivering and constriction of surface vessels
  • raise internal body temperature as needed

44
FUNCTIONS OF SKIN
  • blood reservoir
  • extensive network of blood vessels
  • protection - physical, chemical and biological
    barriers
  • tight cell junctions prevent bacterial invasion
  • lipids released retard evaporation
  • pigment protects somewhat against UV light
  • Langerhans cells alert immune system
  • cutaneous sensations
  • touch, pressure, vibration, tickle, heat, cold,
    and pain arise in the skin

45
FUNCTIONS OF SKIN
  • Synthesis of Vitamin D
  • activation of a precursor molecule in the skin by
    UV light
  • enzymes in the liver and kidneys modify the
    activated molecule to produce calcitriol, the
    most active form of vitamin D.
  • necessary vitamin for absorption of calcium from
    food in the gastrointestinal tract
  • excretion
  • 400 mL of water/day, small amounts salt, CO2,
    ammonia and urea

46
Transdermal Drug Administration
  • method of drug passage across the epidermis and
    into the blood vessels of the dermis
  • drug absorption is 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)

47
MAINTAINING HOMEOSTASIS SKIN WOUND HEALING
48
Epidermal Wound Healing
  • Abrasion or minor burn
  • Basal cells migrate across the wound (Figure
    5.9a)
  • Contact inhibition with other cells stops
    migration
  • Epidermal growth factor stimulates basal cells to
    divide and replace the ones that have moved into
    the wound (Figure 5.9b).
  • Full thickness of epidermis results from further
    cell division

49
Deep Wound Healing
  • When an injury extends to tissues deep to the
    epidermis, the repair process is more complex
    than epidermal healing, and scar formation
    results.
  • 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

50
Deep Wound Healing
  • Phases of Deep Wound Healing
  • During the inflammatory phase, a blood clot
    unites the wound edges, epithelial cells migrate
    across the wound, vasodilatation and increased
    permeability of blood vessels deliver phagocytes,
    and fibroblasts form (Figure 5.9c).
  • During the migratory phase, epithelial cells
    beneath the scab bridge the wound, fibroblasts
    begin scar tissue, and damaged blood vessels
    begin to grow. During this phase, tissue filling
    the wound is called granulation tissue.

51
Phases of Deep Wound Healing
52
Deep Wound Healing
  • Phases of Deep Wound Healing
  • During the proliferative phase, the events of the
    migratory phase intensify.
  • During the maturation phase, the scab sloughs
    off, the epidermis is restored to normal
    thickness, collagen fibers become more organized,
    fibroblasts begin to disappear, and blood vessels
    are restored to normal (Figure 5.9).
  • Scar tissue formation (fibrosis) can occur in
    deep wound healing.

53
DEVELOPMENT OF THE INTEGUMENTARY SYSTEM
  • Epidermis develops from ectodermal germ layer
  • Hair, nails, and skin glands are epidermal
    derivatives (Figure 5.10a).
  • The connective tissue and blood vessels
    associated with the gland develop from mesoderm.
  • Dermis develops from mesenchymal mesodermal germ
    layer cells

54
Development of the Skin
  • Timing
  • at 8 weeks, fetal skin is simple cuboidal
  • nails begin to form at 10 weeks, but do not reach
    the fingertip until the 9th month
  • dermis forms from mesoderm by 11 weeks
  • by 16 weeks, all layers of the epidermis are
    present
  • oil and sweat glands form in 4th and 5th month
  • by 6th months, delicate fetal hair (lanugo) has
    formed
  • Slippery coating of oil and sloughed off skin
    called vernix caseosa is present at birth

55
Age Related Structural Changes
  • Collagen fibers decrease in number stiffen
  • Elastic fibers become less elastic
  • Fibroblasts decrease in number
  • decrease in number of melanocytes (gray hair,
    blotching)
  • decrease in Langerhans cells (decreased immune
    responsiveness)
  • reduced number and less-efficient phagocytes

56
AGING AND THE INTEGUMENTARY SYSTEM
  • Most of the changes occur in the dermis
  • wrinkling, slower growth of hair and nails
  • dryness and cracking due to sebaceous gland
    atrophy
  • Walls of blood vessels in dermis thicken so
    decreased nutrient availability leads to thinner
    skin as subcutaneous fat is lost.
  • anti-aging treatments
  • microdermabrasion, chemical peel, laser
    resurfacing, dermal fillers, Botuliism toxin
    injection, and non surgical face lifts.
  • Sun screens and sun blocks help to minimize
    photodamage from ultraviolet exposure

57
Photodamage
  • Ultraviolet light (UVA and UVB) both damage the
    skin
  • Acute overexposure causes sunburn
  • DNA damage in epidermal cells can lead to skin
    cancer
  • UVA produces oxygen free radicals that damage
    collagen and elastic fibers and lead to wrinkling
    of the skin

58
DISORDERS HOMEOSTATIC IMBALANCES
  • Skin cancer can be caused by excessive exposure
    to sunlight.
  • Among the risk factors for skin cancer are skin
    type, sun exposure, family history, age, and
    immunologic status.
  • The three most common forms are
  • basal cell carcinoma,
  • squamous cell carcinoma, and
  • malignant melanoma.

59
Skin Cancer
  • 1 million cases diagnosed per year
  • 3 common forms of skin cancer
  • basal cell carcinoma (rarely metastasize)
  • squamous cell carcinoma (may metastasize)
  • malignant melanomas (metastasize rapidly)
  • most common cancer in young women
  • arise from melanocytes ----life threatening
  • key to treatment is early detection watch for
    changes in symmetry, border, color and size
  • risks factors include-- skin color, sun exposure,
    family history, age and immunological status

60
Burns
  • Tissue damage from excessive heat, electricity,
    radioactivity, or corrosive chemicals that
    destroys (denatures) proteins in the exposed
    cells is called a burn.
  • Generally, the systemic effects of a burn are a
    greater threat to life than are the local
    effects.
  • The seriousness of a burn is determined by its
    depth, extent, and area involved, as well as the
    persons age and general health. When the burn
    area exceeds 70, over half of the victims die.

61
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
  • Two methods for determining the extent of a burn
    are the rule of nines and the Lund-Bowder method
    (Figure 5.13).

62
Burns
63
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

64
Burns
65
Pressure Sores
  • Pressure ulcers, also known as decubitus ulcers
  • caused by a constant deficiency of blood to
    tissues overlying a bony projection that has been
    subjected to prolonged pressure
  • typically occur between bony projection and hard
    object such as a bed, cast, or splint
  • the deficiency of blood flow results in tissue
    ulceration.
  • Preventable with proper care

66
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