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Skin & Appendages

Skin & Appendages. I. General Concepts and Considerations. A. Heaviest single organ of body. 16% of total body weight 1.2 - 2.3 m 2 surface area. Epidermis. Dermis. Hypodermis. C. Functions of the skin. Protection from injury, desiccation, infection Regulation of body temperature

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Skin & Appendages

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  1. Skin & Appendages I. General Concepts and Considerations

  2. A. Heaviest single organ of body • 16% of total body weight • 1.2 - 2.3 m2 surface area Epidermis Dermis Hypodermis

  3. C. Functions of the skin • Protection from injury, desiccation, infection • Regulation of body temperature • Absorption of UV radiation for synthesis of vitamin D • Reception of sensory stimuli • Secretion of protective lipids, milk • Dermis and epidermis interdigitate via dermal papillae - best developed in areas exposed to shearing stress • Classified as thick or thin depending on the thickness of epidermis

  4. Skin & Appendages II. Epidermis

  5. A. Characteristics • Keratinized stratified squamous epithelium • Regenerated by keratinocytes • Formed by five layers or strata • turnover from basal to superficial varies from site to site • 25-30 days fastest; 40-50 days slowest • Downgrowths produce sweat glands and hair follicles

  6. Epidermis

  7. B. Stratum Basale • Deepest layer, attached to basement membrane by hemidesmosomes • Keratinocytes, large euchromatic nuclei, mitotically active • Melanocytes and Merkel cells

  8. C. Stratum Spinosum • A few layers of prickly keratinocytes • Intercellular bridges formed by desmosomes • Round, euchromatic nuclei, mitotically active • Concentrated tonofilaments in cytoplasm • Upper cells cemented together to waterproof the skin • Langerhans cells & cytoplasmic projections of melanocytes • Psoriasis

  9. D. Stratum Granulosum • Cells accumulate keratohyalin granules and bundles of intermediate keratin filaments • All cells produce membrane-coated granules • Keratohyalin granules composed of histidine- & cystine-rich proteins that glue keratin filaments together • Nuclei are present

  10. E. Stratum Lucidum • Clear homogenous layer • Nuclei and organelles are not present • Cells contain eleidin

  11. F. Stratum Corneum – Thick Skin • Outermost layer, formed of dead cells • Surface cells continuously desquamated

  12. F. Stratum Corneum – Thin Skin

  13. Langerhans Cell Melanocytes G. Other cellular components • Melanocytes • Langerhans cells • Merkel's cells

  14. 1. Melanocytes • structure • derivation • melanosomes • keratinocytes • skin color • distribution • races • tanning

  15. 1. Melanocytes

  16. 2. Langerhans cells • dendritic-shaped cells derived from the bone marrow • present in all layers but mainly in stratum spinosum • ovid, pale-staining nuclei, cytoplasm with granules, processes • function as APCs • increase in number in chronic inflammatory skin diseases

  17. 3. Merkel's cells • found in thick skin; scanty and difficult to find in thin skin • present in stratum basale • contain small dense-core granules • receive afferent nerve terminals, believed to function as sensory - mechanoreceptors

  18. H. Types of Skin

  19. Epidermis Epidermis H. Types of Skin Thin SkinThick Skin Covers entire body except palms and soles On palms and soles of the feet (0.5 mm on the eyelid, 5 mm on the back) (0.8 mm to 1.5 mm thick) Thin epidermis, dermis can be thick Thick epidermis Hair follicles with sebaceous glands Hairless thus no sebaceous glands Sweat glands Sweat glands

  20. Skin & Appendages III. Dermis

  21. A. Characteristics • Dense irreg. FECT • Contents • Aging • Blood vessels

  22. 400X 40X Epidermal-Dermal Junction • Scalloped margin consisting of epidermal pegs and dermal papillae • Strengthens attachment of epidermis to the underlying dermis Epidermal peg Dermal papilla

  23. Dermis

  24. Blood Vessels of Dermis

  25. B. Layers • Papillary Layer - loose FECT that forms the dermal papillae, loops of small blood vessels and capillaries, nerve endings

  26. B. Layers • Reticular Layer - dense irregular FECT that forms bulk of dermis, with blood vessels and a-v shunts, lymphatics and nerves

  27. B. Layers • Erector Pili Muscle • bundles of smooth muscle, attached to hair follicles in dermis and papillary layer of dermis • contraction elevates hairs (makes them more vertical) and produces goose bumps

  28. 3. Erector Pili Muscle

  29. C. Nerve Supply • Sympathetic NS • Afferent fibers • Free nerve endings • Pacinian Corpuscles • Meissner's Corpuscles

  30. Paccinian Corpuscle

  31. Meisner’s Corpuscle

  32. D. Blisters

  33. E. Dermatitis

  34. Wound Repair

  35. Skin & Appendages IV. Glands

  36. Eccrine sweat glands • Characteristics • Dark cells • Clear cells • Myoepithelial cells • Ducts • Dermis & epidermis • Produce sweat • Sweat

  37. B. Apocrine Sweat Glands Hair follicle Hair follicle Sebaceous gland Sebaceous gland • In axillary, areolar & anal regions • Viscous secretion • Empty into hair follicles

  38. C. Sebaceous Glands • Holocrine gland • Hair follicle • Non-hair • Activity • Sebum • Number & size • Locations • Absent • Acne

  39. C. Sebaceous Glands

  40. Skin & Appendages V. Appendages

  41. A. Hair • Derived from epidermal epithelium • Locations • Medulla, cortex, & cuticle • Root of hair, hair bulb, dermal papilla • Rate of growth • Hair color due to melanin

  42. B. Nails • Location • Nail plate & nail bed • Eponychium (cuticle) • Hyponychium • Growth

  43. B. Nails

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