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The Integumentary System

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Collagen fibers give skin its strenth and resilience ... scalp hair protects the head against direct sunlight on hot days and heat loss on cold days ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Integumentary System


1
The Integumentary System
  • Guaranteed to Last a Lifetime
  • Chapter 5

2
Integumentary System
  • Integument (skin) and Accessory Organs
  • Cutaneous Membrane (Skin) largest organ
  • - epidermis
  • - dermis
  • Accessory Organs derive from epithelial cells
    of the epidermis but all extend into the dermis
  • - sweat glands and sebaceous (oil) glands
  • - hair follicles
  • - nails
  • Hypodermis has similar functions as skin
  • - fatty layer deep to the skin
  • - connects skin to underlying organs

3
Skin Structure
Figure 5.1
4
Skin and Underlying Tissues
  • 7 of total body weight
  • 1.5 4 mm thick
  • 2 distinct regions
  • - epidermis, superficial thick epithelial
    tissue
  • - dermis, fibrous CT deep to the epidermis
  • Deep to the skin is the hypodermis
  • - composed of loose areolar CT and adipose
    tissue

Figure 5.2
5
Functions of The Skin
  • Helps the body to maintain homeostasis
  • Protection against environmental hazards
  • Thermoregulation
  • Synthesis and storage of lipid reserves
  • Synthesis of vitamin D
  • Excretion (urea, salts, water)
  • Sensory information
  • Coordination of immune response

6
LE 4-1
7
Epidermis
  • Consists of keratinized stratified squamous
    epithelium
  • 4 distinct cell types
  • keratinocytes, melanocytes, Merkel cells, and
    Langerhans cells
  • Layers of the Epidermis (from superficial to
    deep)
  • - Stratum corneum
  • - Stratum lucidum (only in thick skin)
  • - Stratum granulosum
  • - Stratum spinosum
  • - Stratum basale

8
Layers of the Epidermis
Figure 5.3
9
Thick vs Thin Skin 5 layers vs 4 layers or
strata (bed sheets)
Fig 5.4
10
Epidermal Cells
  • Keratinocytes produce keratin, a tough fibrous
    protein
  • - provides physical and mechanical protection
  • - produces antibiotics and enzymes that detoxify
    harmful chemicals
  • - undergoes almost continuous mitosis
  • Melanocytes produce the skin pigment melanin
    (black)
  • - made in granules and transferred to nearby
    keratinocytes
  • - cluster on the superficial side of
    keratinocytes (between incoming radiation and
    cell nuclei) shielding the cells DNA from UV
    rays
  • - digested by lysosomes in light-skinned people
  • - secretes signaling moleules in response to UV
    radiation that act to modulate the skins immune
    and inflammatory responses
  • Merkel cells hemisphere-shaped cells sensitive
    to touch
  • - when compressed release chemicals that
    stimulate disclike sensory nerve endings (touch
    receptor)
  • Langerhans cells star-shaped dendritic type
    cells
  • - take up pathogens by receptor-mediated
    endocytosis
  • - travel to a nearby lymph node to initiate an
    antigenic immune response

11
Stratum Basale (Basal Layer)
  • Aka the stratum germinativum (germinating
    layer) - the deepest
  • epidermal layer firmly attached to the underlying
    dermis
  • Consists of a single row of cells mostly young
    keratinocytes (stem cells)
  • - as these cells are pushed up by production of
    new cells beneath them they make the keratin that
    eventually fills their cytoplasm
  • - when they reach the skin surface they are
    dead, flat sacs of keratin
  • Merkel cells are distributed sparsely among the
    keratinocytes - associate with disclike sensory
    nerve ending
  • 10-25 of the cells are spider-shaped melanocytes
    (melanin cells)

12
Stratum Spinosum (Spiny Layer)
  • Name is derived from spinelike extensions of its
    keratinocytes
  • (artifact created during tissue preparation)
  • Several cell layers thick
  • Lower rate of mitosis than in the basal layer
  • Contain thick bundles of intermediate filaments
  • - tonofilaments (tension filaments) that
    contain pre-keratin (tension-resisting protein)
  • Langerhans cells - scattered among the
    keratinocytes
  • - initiate an immune response to all foreign
    cells that carry a foreign antigen (lymphocyte
    activation)

13
Stratum Granulosum (Granular Layer)
  • Thin layer with many granules
  • Composed of 1 to 5 layers of flattened
    keratinocytes
  • Contain abundant tonofilaments
  • Contain granules - keratohyalin and lamellated
    (plated)
  • - keratohyalin granules help form keratin in the
    more superficial layers
  • - lamellated granules contain a waterproof
    glycolipid that is secreted into the
    extracellular space (slows water loss across the
    epidermis)
  • PM of the cells thicken to become more resistant
  • Epidermal cells in the layers above the stratum
    granulosum,
  • are too far from the dermal (underlying CT)
    capillaries to
  • receive nourishment

14
Stratum Lucidum (Clear Layer)
  • Aka the transition zone
  • Occurs only in thick skin
  • In light microscopy appears as a thin translucent
    band
  • Consists of a few rows of flat, dead
    keratinocytes
  • - electron microscopy reveals these cells are
    identical to the next layer

15
Stratum Corneum (Horny Layer)
  • Most external (superficial) layer of the
    epidermis
  • Many cells thick and much thicker than in thin
    skin
  • Dead keratinocytes are completely filled with
    keratin
  • - upon death their nuclei and organelles
    disintegrated
  • Keratin consists of tonofilaments embedded in a
    glue from the keratohyalin granules
  • - both the keratin and the cells thickened PMs
    protect skin against abrasion and penetration
  • Waterproof layer due to the glycolipid between
    the cells
  • Cells are referred to as cornified or horny
    (cornu horn)
  • - they are the dandruff shed from the scalp and
    flakes from dry skin
  • - an average person sheds 18 kg (40 lbs) in a
    lifetime

16
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17
The Dermis
  • The 2nd major layer of the skin is a strong
    flexible CT that binds
  • the entire body together
  • Consists of 2 layers the papillary and
    reticular layers
  • Cell types fibroblast, macrophages, mast cells,
    and scattered WBCs
  • Fiber types collagen, elastic, and reticular
  • Richly supplied with nerve fibers and BVs

18
Dermal BVs
  • 2 vascular plexuses -network of converging
    diverging vessels
  • Deeper cutaneous plexus (between hypodermis and
    dermis)
  • - nourishes the hypodermis and the structures
    within the deeper portions of the dermis
  • More superficial subpapillary plexus (below
    dermal papillae)
  • - supplies more superficial dermal structures,
    the dermal papillae and the epidermis
  • Dermal BVs play a critical role in
    thermoregulation
  • - BVs are extensive and can hold 5 of all blood
    in the body
  • - if internal organs need more blood or heat,
    nerves stimulate dermal vessels to constrict
    shunting more blood into the general circulation
  • - on hot days dermal vessels engorge with warm
    blood, cooling the body by radiating heat away
    from it

19
Papillary Dermal Layer
  • Papillary layer superficial 20 of the dermis
  • Composed of areolar CT with thin collagen
    elastic fibers
  • Papillae (nipples), fingerlike projections that
    extend into the overlying epidermis
  • - increases surface area for exchange of gases,
    nutrients, and waste products between the dermal
    layers
  • - avascular epidermis depends on the diffusion
    of these materials
  • - interdigitation strengthens the
    dermal-epidermal junction reducing blister
    formation
  • Contains dermal ridges papillae lie atop of
    these mounds
  • - elevates overlying epidermis into epidermal
    ridges (friction ridges) create fingerprints,
    palmprints, and footprints
  • - increases friction, enhances gripping ability
    of the hands and feet
  • - patterns are unique and genetically determined
  • - sweat pores, open along crests of epidermal
    ridges leave distinct fingerprints

20
Reticular Dermal Layer
  • Deeper reticulum (network) layer accounts for
    80 of the
  • dermis thickness
  • Consists of dense irregular CT
  • ECM has thick bundles of interlaced collagen
    elastic fibers
  • - named for its networks of collagen fibers
  • Lines of cleavage or tension lines
  • - separation formed by less dense regions
    between collagen bundles
  • - invisible lines occur over the entire body
    important that surgeons make incisions parallel
    to these lines
  • Collagen fibers give skin its strenth and
    resilience
  • Elastic fibers provide stretch-recoil properties
  • - extreme stretching results in striae
    (streaks)
  • Flexure lines, markings from the deep part of the
    dermis

21
Flexure lines form as a result of a continual
folding of the skin, often over joints, where the
dermis attaches tightly to underlying structures
(palm, wrist, soles, fingers, and toes)
Figure 5.5
22
Hypodermis (below the skin)
  • Fatty hypodermis deep to the skin aka the
    superficial
  • fascia subcutaneous (below the skin) layer
  • Consists of both areolar and adipose CT
  • Stores fat
  • Anchors skin to underlying structures (mostly
    muscle)
  • - but allows skin to slide relatively freely
  • Insulator fat a poor conductor of heat prevents
    heat loss from the body
  • Thickens with weight gain
  • - accumulates 1st in the thighs and breasts of
    ?s
  • - in ?s accumulates in the anterior abdomen
    (beer belly)

23
Skin Color
  • 3 pigments melanin, carotene, hemoglobin
  • Melanin, most important - tyrosine (tyrosinase)
  • - ranges from yellow to reddish to brown to
    black
  • Carotene, yellow-orange pigment - vegetables
  • - accumulates in the epidermis stratum corneum
    and in the fat of the hypodermis
  • Pink hue - oxygenated hemoglobin
  • - from capillaries of the dermis
  • - Caucasian skin contains little melanin allows
    color of blood to show
  • - bruising reflects sites where blood escaped
    from the circulation and clotted below the skin
  • Hematoma (blood swelling), clotted mass of
    escaped blood

24
Abnormal Skin Colors
  • Cyanosis bluish color
  • Erythremia abnormal redness
  • Jaundice yellowish color
  • Pallor pale or ashen color
  • Albinism pale skin, white hair, pink eyes
  • Hematoma black blue bruise

25
Nails
  • Superficial keratinized layers of the epidermis
  • Has a distal free edge, a body, and a root rests
    on a epidermal nail bed
  • Pink color due to rich network of capillaries in
    the underlying dermis

Figure 5.6
26
Hair
  • Distributed all over the skin surface, except on
    palms, soles,
  • nipples, and parts of external genitalia
  • Main function - to sense touch
  • Thermoregulation
  • - scalp hair protects the head against direct
    sunlight on hot days and heat loss on cold days
  • Consists of a flexible strand of dead,
    keratinized cells
  • - hard keratin predominates in hair and nails
  • 1) tougher and more durable 2) cells do not
    flake off
  • Chief parts the root (embedded in the skin) and
    the shaft (projects above the skin surface)

27
Hair Structure
  • A hair shaft consists of 3 concentric layers
  • Medulla (middle) central core of large cells
    and air sacs
  • Cortex consists of several layers of flattened
    cells
  • Cuticle a single layer of overlapping cells
  • - most heavily keratinized provides strength and
    binding

Figure 5.7
28
Hair Follicles
  • Extend from the epidermal surface into the dermis
  • Hair bulb expanded end of the follicle
  • Hair follicle receptor or root hair plexus knot
    of sensory nerve endings
  • CT papilla (hair papilla) dermal bit that
    protudes into the hair bulb contains a knot of
    capillaries
  • Hair matrix epithelial cells in the hair bulb
  • - proliferating cells that form the hair shaft
  • Wall of a hair follicle is composed of
  • - an outer CT root sheath (derived from the
    dermis)
  • - inner epithelial root sheath (derived from the
    epidermis)
  • Glassy membrane basement membrane of the
    follicle epithelium

29
Arrector pili (raiser of the hair) muscle
  • Bundle of smooth muscle cells associated with
    each follicle

Figure 5.7
30
Scanning electron micrograph of a hair shaft
emerging from a follicle at the epidermal surface
Figure 5.8
31
Types and Growth of Hair
  • Vellus (vellwool,fleece) body hair, fine and
    short
  • Terminal longer coarser scalp hair and hair
    that appears at puberty
  • Androgens (testosterone) male sex hormone that
    influences terminal hair (face, chest, arms, and
    legs)
  • Active follicle
  • Resting follicle

Figure 5.9
32
Sebaceous (greasy) Glands
  • The skins oil glands
  • Occur over entire body except palms and soles
  • Simple alveolar glands with several alveoli
    openings into a single duct
  • - alveoli filled with cells (no lumen) that
    produce sebum (animal fat)
  • Holocrine secretion (holos whole)
  • - central cells fill with oily lipids until they
    burst
  • - empty sebum into the upper 1/3 of hair
    follicles
  • - spread superficially to cover the skin
  • - secretion stimulated by hormones, especially
    androgens
  • Makes skin and hair oily and in addition
  • - collects dirt, softens and lubricates hair and
    skin, prevents hair from becoming brittle, keeps
    epidermis from cracking
  • - helps to slow water loss across the skin and
    kills bacteria

33
Sebaceous Glands
Figure 5.10
34
Sweat (sudoriferous) Glands
  • Only mammals have sweat glands
  • humans have gt 2.5 million over entire skin
    surface
  • - produce about 500 ml of sweat per day (up to
    12L)
  • Sweat - 1 a blood filtrate released by
    exocytosis
  • - 99 water some salts (NaCl) and traces of
    metabolic wastes (urea, ammonia, uric acid)
  • - acidic property retards growth of bacteria
  • 2 types of sweat glands eccrine (secreting)
    aprocrine
  • - both secrete in response to heat or stress
  • - eccrine glands are more numerous and produce
    true sweat
  • - aprocrine glands are mainly confined to the
    axillary, anal, and genital areas and produce
    viscous and sometimes a milky or yellow color
    secretion

35
Sweat Glands
  • Eccrine glands - most abundant
  • on palms, soles, and forehead
  • - coiled, secretory base in the deep dermis and
    hypodermis
  • - duct opens at skin surface (pore)
  • Note facial pores are openings of hair
  • follicles
  • Apocrine glands - function at
  • puberty due to androgens
  • - ducts open into hair follicles
  • - involved in sexual signaling (pheromones)

Figure 5.10b
36
Burns
  • Tissue damage inflicted by heat, electricity,
    radiation,
  • extreme friction, or chemical
  • Immediate threat from serious burns loss of
    body fluids
  • - severe inflammatory edema
  • - dehydration leads to circulatory shock
  • Followed by infection loss of skin barrier
  • Classified by severity (depth) partial and
    full-thickness
  • - 1st degree only epidermis is damaged
    (sunburn)
  • - 2nd degree epidermis and upper part of the
    dermis (blisters)
  • - 3rd degree epidermis, dermis, hypodermis
  • Rule of Nines - divides the body into 11 regions
  • - Critical burns 1) over 10 of the body has
    3rd degree burns 2) 25 of the body has 2nd
    degree burns 3) 3rd degree burns on the face,
    hands, or feet

37
Burns Rule of Nines
Figure 5.11
38
Skin Cancer
  • Most common type of cancer, million new cases in
    US / year
  • Highest risk factor overexposure to UV rays in
    sunlight
  • Increased risk with use of indoor tanning
  • 3 types of skin cancer
  • - Basal Cell Carcinoma
  • - Squamous Cell Carcinoma
  • - Melanoma

39
Squamous Cell Carcinoma
Basal Cell Carcinoma
  • Least malignant most common (gt30 of all
    Caucasians)
  • Cells of stratum basale proliferate, invading the
    dermis hypodermis
  • Most common lesions are dome-shaped, shiny
    nodules on the face
  • Nodules develop an ulcer
  • Grows slowly, metastasis is rare
  • 99 full cure by removal
  • Arises from the keratinocytes of the stratum
    spinosum
  • Scaly, irregular, reddened papule that grows
    rapidly
  • Metastasis - if not removed
  • Overall cure rate 99
  • Treatment - radiation, surgery, skin creams with
    anticancer drugs

Figure 5.12
40
Most DangerousMelanomaCancer of Melanocytes
  • Only 1 of every 20 skin cancers
  • Increasing by 3-8 / yr in US
  • Often arises from existing moles
  • Melanoma cells metastasize
  • - into surrounding circulatory vessels
  • Key to survival early detection
  • - low survival chance mole gt4mm thick
  • Resistant to chemotherapy and immunotherapy
  • ABCD(E) rule
  • Asymmetry 2 halves dont match Border
    irregularity indents / notches Color pigment
    spot, several colors
  • Diameter - gt6mm
  • Elevation above the skin surface

41
The Skin Throughout Life
  • Epidermis develops from embryonic ectoderm
  • Dermis and hypodermis develop from mesoderm
  • Melanocytes develop from neural crest cells (3
    months)
  • In 5th and 6th months fetus covered with lanugo
    (wool/down)
  • Shed by the 7th month when vellus hairs appear
  • Birth skin covered with vernix caseosa (varnish
    of cheese)
  • Adolescence, acne may appear, subsides in early
    adulthood
  • Optimal appearance in 20s 30s
  • - after skin shows harmful effects of continued
    environmental assaults
  • - dermatitis become more common
  • Photoaging
  • - pigment spots liver spots
  • - large amounts of melanin protect skin from
    photoaging

42
Clinical Terms
  • Alopecia
  • Athletes Foot
  • Boils and Carbuncles
  • Cold Sores (Fever Blisters)
  • Impetigo (an attack)
  • Psoriasis (an itching)
  • Vitiligo (blemish)
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