INTRODUCTION
The skin and
its accessory structures (hair, nails, and glands) make up the integumentary system
of the body. Integument means covering, and the skin (weighing 8 to 10 pounds
and extending over an area of 22 square feet in an average adult) is the outer
covering for the body. It is, however, more than a simple body covering. This
complex system of specialized tissues contains glands that secrete several
types of fluids, nerves that carry impulses, and blood vessels that aid in the
regulation of the body temperature.
The skin has
many important functions:
First, as a
protective membrane over the entire body, the skin guards the deeper tissues of
the body against excessive loss of water, salts, and heat and against invasion
of pathogens and their toxins. Secretions from the skin are slightly acidic in
nature, which contributes to the skin’s ability to prevent bacterial invasion.
Specialized cells (Langerhans cells) react to the presence of antigens and have
an immune function.
Second, the
skin contains two types of glands that produce important secretions. These glands
in the skin are the sebaceous glands and the sweat glands. Sebaceous glands
produce sebum, an oily secretion, and sweat glands produce sweat, a watery
secretion. Sebum and sweat pass to the outer edges of the skin through ducts
and leave the skin through openings, or pores. Sebum lubricates the surface of
the skin, and sweat cools the body as it evaporates from the skin surface.
Third, nerve
fibers under the skin are receptors for sensations such as pain, temperature, pressure,
and touch. Thus, the body’s adjustment to the environment depends on sensory messages
relayed to the brain and spinal cord by sensitive nerve endings in the skin.
Fourth,
different tissues in the skin maintain body temperature
(thermoregulation).Nerve fibers coordinate thermoregulation by carrying
messages to the skin from heat centers in the brain that are sensitive to
increases and decreases in body temperature.
Impulses
from these fibers cause blood vessels to dilate to bring blood to the surface
and
cause sweat
glands to produce the watery secretion that carries heat away.
ANATOMY OF THE SKIN
Figure
A shows three layers of the skin. Label them from the outer surface inward:
Epidermis
[1]—a thin, cellular membrane layer; containing keratin
Dermis
[2]—dense, fibrous, connective tissue layer; containing
collagen
Subcutaneous
layer [3]—thick, fat-containing tissue
EPIDERMIS
The
epidermis is the outermost, totally cellular layer of the skin. It is composed
of squamous epithelium. Epithelium is the covering of both the internal and the
external surfaces of the body. Squamous epithelial cells are flat and
scale-like. In the outer layer of the skin, these cells are arranged in several
layers (strata) to form stratified squamous epithelium. The epidermis lacks
blood vessels, lymphatic vessels, and connective tissue (elastic fibers, cartilage,
fat) and is therefore dependent on the deeper dermis layer and its rich network
of capillaries for nourishment. In fact, oxygen and nutrients seep out of the
capillaries in the dermis, pass through tissue fluid, and supply nourishment to
the lower layers of the epidermis.
Figure
B illustrates the multilayered cells of the epidermis. The deepest layer is called
the basal layer [4]. The cells in the basal layer are constantly growing and
multiplying and are the source of all the other cells in the epidermis. As the
basal layer cells divide, they are pushed upward and away from the blood supply
of the dermal layer by a steady stream of younger cells. In their movement
toward the most superficial layer of the epidermis, called the stratum corneum [5],
the cells flatten, shrink, lose their nuclei, and die, becoming filled with a
hard protein material called keratin. The cells are then called keratinocytes, reflecting
their composition of keratin. Finally, within 3 to 4 weeks after beginning as a
basal cell in the deepest part of the epidermis, the keratinized cell is
sloughed off from the surface of the skin. The epidermis is thus constantly
renewing itself, with cells dying at the same rate at which they are replaced.
are pushed upward and away from the blood supply of the dermal layer by a
steady stream of younger cells. In their movement toward the most superficial
layer of the epidermis, called the stratum corneum [5], the cells flatten,
shrink, lose their nuclei, and die, becoming filled with a hard protein
material called keratin. The cells are then called keratinocytes, reflecting
their composition of keratin. Finally, within 3 to 4 weeks after beginning as a
basal cell in the deepest part of the epidermis, the keratinized cell is
sloughed off from the surface of the skin. The epidermis is thus constantly
renewing itself, with cells dying at the same rate at which they are replaced.
The
basal layer of the epidermis contains special cells called melanocytes [6].
Melanocytes contain a pigment called melanin that is transferred to other
epidermal cells and gives color to the skin. The number of melanocytes in all
human races is the same, but the amount of melanin within each cell accounts
for the color differences among the races. Individuals with darker skin possess
more melanin within the melanocytes, not a greater number of melanocytes.
Individuals who are incapable of forming melanin are called albinos. Skin and
hair are white. In albinos, eye color varies from red to blue to brown, depending
on the amount of melanin present in the iris (pigmented portion of the eye). Occulocutaneous
albinism affects eyes, skin, and hair, while ocular albinism affects the eyes
only.
Melanin
production increases with exposure to strong ultraviolet light, and this
creates a suntan, which is a protective response. When the melanin cannot
absorb all of the ultraviolet rays, the skin becomes sunburned and inflamed
(redness, swelling, and pain).
Over
a period of years, excessive exposure to sun tends to cause wrinkles, permanent
pigmentary changes, and even cancer of the skin. Because dark-skinned people
have more melanin, they acquire fewer wrinkles and they are less likely to
develop the types of skin cancer that are associated with ultraviolet light
exposure.
DERMIS
The
dermis, directly below the epidermis, is composed of blood and lymph vessels
and nerve fibers, as well as the accessory organs of the skin, which are the
hair follicles, sweat glands, and sebaceous glands. To support the elaborate
system of nerves, vessels, and glands, the dermis contains connective tissue
cells and fibers that account for the extensibility and elasticity of the skin.
The
dermis is composed of interwoven elastic and collagen fibers. Collagen (colla =
glue) is a fibrous protein material found in bone, cartilage, tendons, and
ligaments, as well as in the skin. It is tough and resistant but also flexible.
In the infant, collagen is loose and delicate; it becomes harder as the body
ages. During pregnancy, overstretching of the skin with weight gain may break
the elastic fibers, resulting in linear markings called striae (“stretch
marks”) on the woman’s abdomen and elsewhere. Collagen fibers support and protect
the blood and nerve networks that pass through the dermis. Collagen diseases
affect connective tissues of the body. Examples of these connective tissue
collagen disorders are systemic lupus erythematosus and scleroderma.
SUBCUTANEOUS LAYER
The
subcutaneous layer (epidermis and dermis are the cutaneous layers) specializes
in the formation of fat. Adipocytes (fat cells) are predominant in the
subcutaneous layer, and they manufacture and store large quantities of fat. Obviously,
fat deposition varies in different areas of the body and among individual
people. Functionally, this layer of the skin is important in protection of the
deeper tissues of the body, as a heat insulator, and for energy storage.
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