1 / 28

Integumentary System

Integumentary System. Integumentary System. Largest organ Seen everyday Spend great deal of time on it Problems can often be seen here first. Integumentary System. 2 major components cutaneous membrane skin accessory structures hair nails exocrine glands. Cutaneous Membrane.

marty
Télécharger la présentation

Integumentary System

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Integumentary System

  2. Integumentary System • Largest organ • Seen everyday • Spend great deal of time on it • Problems can often be seen here first

  3. Integumentary System • 2 major components • cutaneous membrane • skin • accessory structures • hair • nails • exocrine glands

  4. Cutaneous Membrane • outer epidermis • underlying dermis • accessory structures begin in dermis & protrude through epidermis to surface • deep to dermis is loose connective tissue in subcutaneous layer-hypodermis

  5. Functions • Protection • abuse, abrasions, microorganisms, irradiation & chemicals • first line of protection against these irritants • Excretion • exudessalts, water & organic wastes • Maintains body temperature • insulates & cools • Vitamin D3 synthesis • essential for Ca++ metabolism • Storage • storeslipids in adipose tissue in dermis & subcutaneous layers • Detection • contains sensory receptors for touch, pain, pressure & temperature

  6. Epidermis • stratified squamous epithelium • protective barrier against ultra-violet light, bacteria, chemicals & abrasion • 4-5 layers • 4-thin skin • 5-thick skin

  7. Layers of Thick & Thin Skin

  8. Stratum Basale/Stratum Germinativium • separates epidermis from dermis • dermal papillae-extend between adjacent epidermal ridges • one row of cuboidal to columnar shaped-large, basal or germinative cellsdividereplace superficial keratinocytes • 10-25% cells are melanocytes • have long branching processes that extend, reaching into stratum spinosum • Merkel cell–tactile receptor • sensitive to touch

  9. Stratum Spinosum • main cell type-keratinocyte • cells may continue to divide • Langerhans’ (epidermal dendritic) cells • immune response

  10. Stratum Granulosum • grainy layer • cells do not divide • begin to secrete keratin • as cells are pushed upward, away from source of nutrition, they gradually die-become keratinized • as keratin fibers develop cells become thinner & flatter • nuclei & other organelles disintegratecell dies • further dehydration produces tightly interlocked layer of cells made of keratin fibers surrounded by keratohyalin

  11. Stratum Lucidum • clear layer • cells appear clear-because of a keratin precursor • found only in thick skin-soles & palms • cells are flattened, densely packed & filled with keratin

  12. Stratum Corneum • outermost layer • dead, flat, keratinized cells • 25-30 layers • sloughed off • Keratinization or cornification • formation of protective, superficial layers of cells filled with keratin • dry & more or less waterproof-resists surface evaporation-prevents excessive water loss • found on all exposed surfaces except anterior surface of eyes • dead cells are connected by desmosomes-so tight-shed in groups • takes 15-30 days for cell to move from s. germinativium to s. corneum • dead cells remain in s. corneum 2 weeks before being shed • surface maintained by coating it with lipid secretions from sebaceous glands

  13. Dermis • Between epidermis & hypodermis • Dense, irregular connective tissue • Stretches & recoils • Thicker than epidermis • Divided into papillary & reticular layers

  14. Dermis • Papillary layer • closest to epidermis • areolar tissue • Reticular layer • deeper & thickestlayer • dense irregular connective tissue • contains thick bundles of interlacing collagen & elastic fibers • collagen give strength & ability to stretch • elastic stretch & recoil to original length

  15. Dermis • dermal papilla are found here • project into epidermis • some contain touch receptors-Meissner’s Corpuscles (tactile corpuscle) • some have free nerve endings • detect pain, coolness, itching & tickling

  16. Hypodermis not art of the skin stabilizes skin’s position while allowing for independent movement consists of adipose tissue & areolar tissue protectivefunctions-stores fat, helps prevent heat loss & acts as a shock absorber contains sensory endings for touch- lamellatedcorpuscle for deep pressure

  17. Skin Color

  18. Skin Color • Epidermal Pigmentation • Melanin • Carotene • Dermal Circulation

  19. Epidermal Pigmentation Carotene • orange-yellow pigment which accumulates in epidermal cells • most apparent in s. corneum Melanin • brown, yellow-brown or black pigment • made by melanocytes in s. germinativium • travels in melanocyte processes & is transferred to keratinocytes • protects epidermis & dermis from UV radiation • melanocytes respond to UV exposure by increasing their activity • after UV exposure, melanin synthesis accelerates slowly peaking about 10 days after initial exposure • difference in skin color is due the amount made

  20. Dermal Circulation • blood contains RBCs which contain hemoglobin-red pigment • binds & transports O2 • when bound to O2bright red • blood vessels in dermis take on reddish tint-when dilated • circulatory system decreasesskinpale-may turn white • sustained reduction in circulatory system-tissue O2 decreases hemoglobin releases O2turns darker red-seen from surfacebluish-cyanosis

  21. Accessory Structures • Hair • Sweat Glands • Sebaceous Glands • Nails • Teeth Enamel • located in dermis & project through epidermis to surface

  22. Hair • projects above surface of skin • almost everywhere except sides & soles of feet & palms, sides of fingers, toes & lips • first appears-5 months prenatally • larugo-fine, unpigmented & shed before birth • replaced by vellus or terminal hair • Vellus-fine body hair • Terminal-coarser, heavy, deeply pigmented hair found on the scalp, eyebrows, etc • Primary function-protection

  23. Hair • produced in hair follicle • bag which extends into dermis • where it expands formshair bulb • hair root • anchors hair into skin, beginning at base of the hair at the bulb • hair shaft • projects from surface • cuticleconsists of layer of dead keratinized cells which overlap like shingles on a roof • Medulla • core-2-3 rows of cells containing pigment, air spaces & soft keratin • extension of dermal tissue at base-papilla protrudes inside the hair bulb • contains capillaries & nerves. • associated with each hair follicle is a tiny band of smooth muscle-arrector pili • -

  24. Skin Glands • specialized epithelial cells • Exocrine • secrete sweat, oil & wax

  25. Sweat Glands Sudoriferous glands coiled tubes in dermis with ducts leading to surface Apocrine armpits & anogenital area sticky, cloudy, potentially odorous secretion begins secreting at puberty Eccrine more numerous &widely distributed Functions cools surface of skin helps regulate body temperature prevents overheating protects from environmental hazards dilutes harmful chemicals discourages microorganism growth

  26. Types of Sweat Sensible Perspiration • felt as moisture Insensible Perspiration evaporates before being felt Thermoregulatory Sweating Emotional Sweating Cold sweat

  27. Sebaceous Glands • oil glands • secrete sebum (seb = oil) • mixture of triglycerides, cholesterol, proteins & electrolytes • usually secreted into hair follicle in a few regions-lips & mammary papilla & directly secreted onto skin surface of face, back & chest • Holocrine • entire gland dies when it secretes • Functions • inhibits bacterial growth • lubricates • protects keratin • conditions skin

More Related