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The Integumentary System •Skin and its accessory structures Lecture for medical students Department of histology, cytology and embryology KhNMU

The Integumentary System Skin and its accessory structures Lecture for medical students Department of histology, cytology and embryology KhNMU

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Page 1: The Integumentary System Skin and its accessory structures Lecture for medical students Department of histology, cytology and embryology KhNMU

The Integumentary System• Skin and its

accessory structures

Lecture for medical students

Department of histology,cytology and embryology KhNMU

Page 2: The Integumentary System Skin and its accessory structures Lecture for medical students Department of histology, cytology and embryology KhNMU

5-2

General Functions of the Skin

• Regulation of body temperature

• Protection as physical barrier

• Sensory receptors

• Excretion and absorption

• Synthesis of vitamin D

Page 3: The Integumentary System Skin and its accessory structures Lecture for medical students Department of histology, cytology and embryology KhNMU

5-3

• 2 Major layers of skin

– epidermis is epithelial tissue

– dermis is layer of connective tissue, nerve & muscle

• Subcutaneous tissue (hypodermis) is layer of adipose & areolar tissue

– subcutaneous injection

– intradermal = within the skin layer

Page 4: The Integumentary System Skin and its accessory structures Lecture for medical students Department of histology, cytology and embryology KhNMU

5-4

Development of the Skin

• Epidermis develops from ectoderm

• Dermis develops from mesoderm

• Slippery coating of oil and sloughed off skin called vernix caseosa is present at birth

Page 5: The Integumentary System Skin and its accessory structures Lecture for medical students Department of histology, cytology and embryology KhNMU

5-5

Cell types of the Epidermis• Keratinocytes--90%

– produce keratin

• Melanocytes-----8 %

– produces melanin pigment

– long cell processes

• Langerhan cells

– from bone marrow

– phagocytes

Merkel cells

– touch receptor

Page 6: The Integumentary System Skin and its accessory structures Lecture for medical students Department of histology, cytology and embryology KhNMU

5-6

Layers (Strata) of the Epidermis• 5

• 4

• 3

• 2

• 1

Page 7: The Integumentary System Skin and its accessory structures Lecture for medical students Department of histology, cytology and embryology KhNMU

5-7

1. Stratum Basale

• Deepest single layer of cells

• Stratum germinativum

• Combination of merkel cells, melanocytes, keratinocytes & stem cells that divide repeatedly

Page 8: The Integumentary System Skin and its accessory structures Lecture for medical students Department of histology, cytology and embryology KhNMU

5-8

2. Stratum Spinosum

• 8 to 10 cell layers held together by desmosomes

• At slide cells shrink and look spiny

• Melanin

Page 9: The Integumentary System Skin and its accessory structures Lecture for medical students Department of histology, cytology and embryology KhNMU

5-9

3. Stratum Granulosum

• 3 - 5 layers of flat dying cells

• Nuclear degeneration

• Contain dark-staining keratohyalin granules

Page 10: The Integumentary System Skin and its accessory structures Lecture for medical students Department of histology, cytology and embryology KhNMU

5-10

4. Stratum Lucidum

• Seen only in thick skin on palms & soles of feet

• Three to five layers of clear, flat, dead cells

• Contains precursor of keratin

Page 11: The Integumentary System Skin and its accessory structures Lecture for medical students Department of histology, cytology and embryology KhNMU

5-11

5. Stratum Corneum• 25 to 30 layers of flat

dead cells filled with keratin

• Continuously shed• Barrier to light, heat,

water, chemicals & bacteria

• Friction stimulates callus formation

Page 12: The Integumentary System Skin and its accessory structures Lecture for medical students Department of histology, cytology and embryology KhNMU

5-12

Keratinization & Epidermal Growth

• Stem cells divide to produce keratinocytes

• As keratinocytes are pushed up towards the surface, they fill with keratin

Page 13: The Integumentary System Skin and its accessory structures Lecture for medical students Department of histology, cytology and embryology KhNMU

5-13

Dermis

• Connective tissue layer

• Contains hair follicles, glands, nerves & blood vessels

• Major layers of dermis

–papillary

–reticular

Page 14: The Integumentary System Skin and its accessory structures Lecture for medical students Department of histology, cytology and embryology KhNMU

5-14

Papillary l.

• Top 20% of dermis• Composed of loose CT• Finger like projections called dermal

papillae• Functions:

– contains capillaries that feed epidermis– contains Meissner’s corpuscles (touch) & free

nerve endings (pain and temperature)

Page 15: The Integumentary System Skin and its accessory structures Lecture for medical students Department of histology, cytology and embryology KhNMU

5-15

Reticular l.

• Dense irregular connective tissue

• Collagen and elastic fibers

• Contains glands & hair follicles

• Provides strength, extensibility & elasticity to skin

• Epidermal ridges conforms to dermal papillae = fingerprints

Page 16: The Integumentary System Skin and its accessory structures Lecture for medical students Department of histology, cytology and embryology KhNMU

5-16

Types of Skin• Thin skin - covers most of body

– thin epidermis (.1 to .15 mm.) that lacks stratum lucidum

– lacks epidermal ridges, has fewer sweat glands and sensory receptors

• Thick skin - only on palms and soles

– thick epidermis (.6 to 4.5 mm.) with distinct stratum lucidum & thick stratum corneum

– lacks hair follicles and sebaceous glands

– -thick hypodermis

Page 17: The Integumentary System Skin and its accessory structures Lecture for medical students Department of histology, cytology and embryology KhNMU

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Accessory Structures of Skin

• Epidermal derivatives

• Epithelium sinks inward during development to form:

– hair

– glands

– nails

Page 18: The Integumentary System Skin and its accessory structures Lecture for medical students Department of histology, cytology and embryology KhNMU

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Structure of Hair

• Shaft -- visible

– medulla, cortex & cuticle

– Root -- below the surface

• Follicle surrounds root:

– external root sheath

– internal root sheath

– base of follicle is bulb

• germinal cell layer

• C.t.Papilla contains blood vessels

Page 19: The Integumentary System Skin and its accessory structures Lecture for medical students Department of histology, cytology and embryology KhNMU

5-19

Hair Related Structures

• Muscle arrector pili

– smooth muscle in dermis contracts with cold or fear.

– forms goosebumps as hair is pulled vertically

Page 20: The Integumentary System Skin and its accessory structures Lecture for medical students Department of histology, cytology and embryology KhNMU
Page 21: The Integumentary System Skin and its accessory structures Lecture for medical students Department of histology, cytology and embryology KhNMU

Hair Color and Texture

(a) Blond, straight(b) Black, straight

(c) Red, wavy

(d) Gray, wavy

Cuticle

Cortex

Medulla

EumelaninPheomelanin

Eumelanin

Pheomelanin

Airspace

Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc./Joe DeGrandis, photographer

Page 22: The Integumentary System Skin and its accessory structures Lecture for medical students Department of histology, cytology and embryology KhNMU

Glands of the Skin

• Sebaceous

• Sweat

• Ceruminous (wax) glands

• Mammary (milk) glands

Page 23: The Integumentary System Skin and its accessory structures Lecture for medical students Department of histology, cytology and embryology KhNMU

5-23Histology of skin glands

Page 24: The Integumentary System Skin and its accessory structures Lecture for medical students Department of histology, cytology and embryology KhNMU

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Sebaceous (oil) glands• Secretory portion in the dermis

• Most open onto hair shafts

• Sebum

– combination of cholesterol, proteins, fats & salts

– keeps hair and skin from soft & pliable

• Acne

– bacterial inflammation of glands

– secretions stimulated by hormones at puberty

Page 25: The Integumentary System Skin and its accessory structures Lecture for medical students Department of histology, cytology and embryology KhNMU

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Sweat glands

• Eccrine (sweat) glands

– most areas of skin

– regulate body temperature with perspiration

• Apocrine (sweat) glands

– armpit and pubic region

– duct opens onto hair follicle

– secretions more viscous

Page 26: The Integumentary System Skin and its accessory structures Lecture for medical students Department of histology, cytology and embryology KhNMU

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Nails • 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

Page 27: The Integumentary System Skin and its accessory structures Lecture for medical students Department of histology, cytology and embryology KhNMU

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Skin Color• melanin – most significant factor in skin color

– produced by melanocytes– accumulate in the keratinocytes of stratum basale and stratum spinosum– eumelanin – brownish black– pheomelanin - a reddish yellow sulfur-containing pigment

• people of different skin colors have the same number of melanocytes– dark skinned people

• produce greater quantities of melanin• melanin granules in keratinocytes more spread out than tightly clumped• melanin breaks down more slowly• melanized cells seen throughout the epidermis

– light skinned people• melanin clumped near keratinocyte nucleus• melanin breaks down more rapidly• little seen beyond stratum basale

• amount of melanin also varies with exposure toultraviolet (UV) rays of sunlight

Page 28: The Integumentary System Skin and its accessory structures Lecture for medical students Department of histology, cytology and embryology KhNMU

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Thermoregulation

• Releasing of sweat onto the skin– perspiration & its evaporation lowers body

temperature

• Adjusting flow of blood to the body surface– 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

Page 29: The Integumentary System Skin and its accessory structures Lecture for medical students Department of histology, cytology and embryology KhNMU

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Protection

• Physical, chemical and biological barrier– tight cell junctions prevent bacterial invasion– lipids released retard evaporation– pigment protects somewhat against UV light– langerhans cells alert immune system

Page 30: The Integumentary System Skin and its accessory structures Lecture for medical students Department of histology, cytology and embryology KhNMU

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Cutaneous Sensations

• Touch, temperature, pressure, vibration, tickling and some pain sensations arise from the skin.

Page 31: The Integumentary System Skin and its accessory structures Lecture for medical students Department of histology, cytology and embryology KhNMU

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Excretion and Absorption

• Only a minor role is played by the skin

• 400 mL of water evaporates from it daily

• Small amounts salt, CO2, ammonia and urea are excreted

• Lipid soluble substances can be absorbed through the skin– vitamins A, D, E and K, Oxygen and CO2– acetone and dry-cleaning fluid, lead, mercury,

arsenic, poisons in poison ivy and oak

Page 32: The Integumentary System Skin and its accessory structures Lecture for medical students Department of histology, cytology and embryology KhNMU

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Synthesis of Vitamin D

• Sunlight activates a precursor to vitamin D

• Enzymes in the liver and kidneys transform that molecule into calcitriol (most active form of vitamin D)

• Necessary vitamin for absorption of calcium from food in the gastrointestinal tract

Page 33: The Integumentary System Skin and its accessory structures Lecture for medical students Department of histology, cytology and embryology KhNMU

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Epidermal Wound Healing• Abrasion or minor burn• Basal cells migrate across the wound• Contact inhibition with other cells stops migration• Epidermal growth factor stimulates cell division • Full thickness of epidermis results from further

cell division

Page 34: The Integumentary System Skin and its accessory structures Lecture for medical students Department of histology, cytology and embryology KhNMU

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Deep Wound Healing• If an injury reaches dermis, 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

Page 35: The Integumentary System Skin and its accessory structures Lecture for medical students Department of histology, cytology and embryology KhNMU

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Phases of Deep Wound Healing

Which phases have been left out of this illustration?

Page 36: The Integumentary System Skin and its accessory structures Lecture for medical students Department of histology, cytology and embryology KhNMU

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Development of the Skin• Epidermis develops from ectodermal germ layer

• Dermis develops from mesodermal germ layer– at 8 weeks, fetal “skin” is simple cuboidal epithelium– 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

Page 37: The Integumentary System Skin and its accessory structures Lecture for medical students Department of histology, cytology and embryology KhNMU

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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