0% found this document useful (0 votes)
15 views6 pages

A&P Chapter 5 Notes

Notes on Martini Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 5
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
15 views6 pages

A&P Chapter 5 Notes

Notes on Martini Anatomy & Physiology Chapter 5
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 6

OVERVIEW OF THE INTEGUMENTARY SYSTEM:

 Also known as the “Integument”


 Takes up 16% of your body weight
 Separates you from the outside world.
 Endures:
o Microorganisms
o Ultraviolet Rays
o Injuries – Cuts, Scrapes, Etc.
o Chemicals.
 Has 2 Main Parts
1. Skin (cutaneous membrane)
a. Epidermis
b. Dermis
 Underlying area of connective tissues
 Extension network of blood vessels and sensory receptors.
 Sensory Receptors: touch, pressure, temperature, and pain.
2. Accessory Structures Mostly in dermis but
 Hair protrudes through
 Nails epidermis to skin surface.
 Exocrine Glands (eg. Sebaceous (oil) glands)
 The integument is separated from the deep fascia around other organs, such as muscles
and bones, by the hypodermis
o The hypodermis is also called the subcutaneous layer.
o It has a lot of adipose tissue.

Functions of the Cutaneous Layer and Subcutaneous Layer:


1. Protection – against impact, abrasion, loss of water, and chemical attack.
2. Excretion- water, salts, and organic wastes.
3. Maintenance – of normal body temperature (using sweat and adipose layer)
4. Synthesis of Vitamin D – a steroid converted to a hormone that helps produce calcium.
5. Detection – touch, pressure, pain, and temperature (remember as TPPT); sends info out
to the nervous system.

1
Epidermis
 Made of stratified squamous epithelium.
 Avascular
 More active cells 0 close to dermis.
 Superficial cells – dead or inactive.
 Most of the squamous cells are keratinocytes – produce large amounts of keratin.
o Keratin: is a protein produced in skin, hair, and nails.
 Thin skin
o covers most of the body
o 4 layers of keratinocytes
o About .08 mm
 Thick skin
o On palms and soles
o 5 Layers of keratinocytes
o About .5 mm

Layers of Epidermis
 Called stratum (meaning “layer.” Pl. – “strata.”)
1. stratum germinativuum
 Germinative cells divide to replace
lost skin cells
 Melanocytes produce pigment of
melanin.
 Contours of the skin follow ridges in
this layer (fingerprints)
 Ridges interlock with dermis (more
folds = stronger bond)
 The hemidesmosomes attach cells to
basal lamina.
2. stratum spinosum
 Daughter cells from germinativum
cells are pushed here (continue 2
divide)
3. stratum granulosum
 cells stop dividing – start producing lots of keratin.
4. stratum lucidum
 cells become more flat, densely packed, filled with keratin.
5. stratum corneum
 cells are dead, filled with keratin.
 Exposed to the surface
 Cells are connected by hemidesmosomes.
 Water-resistant, but not water-proof.
 You lose 500 mL of water per day due to evaporation.
 Insensible perspiration – cannot feel waterloss.

2
The Basis of Skin Color
 Based on skin pigments and dermal circulation.
 The epidermis has two pigments:
1. carotine
 found in orange vegetables
 yellow/orange pigment
 accumulates in stratum corneum and fatty
tissue
2. melanin
 made by melanocytes in stratum germinatum
 brown, yellow-brown, or black colored
pigment
 travels upwards
 some travel farther than others
 more towards surface in darker skinned people
 Some melanocytes are more productive than others causing differences among
individuals and can make freckles.
 Tanning  UV protection
o Melanin is sent to protect cell nuclei
o Too much UV = damaging fibroblasts  premature wrinkling and skin cancer.
o Vitiligo – loss of melanocytes; probably an auto immune disorder – antibodies attack
melanocytes – affects 1% of population.
Role of Dermal Circulation
 The more blood flow to skin = more red.
 Pale = loss of circulation.
 Jaundice – liver is unable to excrete bile  yellowish bile accumulates in body fluids;
skin & white of eyes become yellow.
Epidermal Growth Factor (EGF)
 Hormone made in salivary glands and glands in duodenum (top part of small intestine)
 Encourages and stimulates many epidermal activities
 Used to grow sheets of cells in tissue culture to treat burns.

Dermis
 Between the epidermis and subcutaneous layer
 Has two layers
1. papillary (superficial)
 gets its name from the dermal papillae the project between the dermal ridges.
 Consists of all the blood vessels, lymphatic vessels, and nerves that supply the
skin surface.
2. Reticular Layer (deeper)
 Dense irregular connective tissue containing collagen (strong & prevents too
much stretching) and elastic fibers.)
 Lines of Cleavage (Figure page 162)
o Useful for surgery; lines represent fiber bundles (collagen and elastic)
o Cut parallel to lines = minimum scarring; through line = bigger scar.
 Blood from bruises leak into the dermis; bruise = contusion

3
o Small blood vessels are damaged and leave a black and blue mark.
 Bedsores (decubitus ulcers)
o Blood flow is blocked to a certain body part because the skin is being pressed and the
body is not moving.
o Kills epidermal cells and allows bacteria in
o Deteriorates dermal tissue; tissue death = necrosis.
o Can be prevented by frequently changing the position of the body

Subcutaneous layer (Hypodermis)


 The Hypodermis has a lot of Areolar and adipose tissue and its quite elastic
 Adipose tissue “baby fat”. It is good for shock absorbing in the early years and it gets
redistributed in adulthood.
 Areolar tissue has a lot of blood. The hypodermis is considered to be a “blood
reservoir” because if the blood vessels constrict, the blood will flow to the other parts of
the body.

Accessory Structures
 Starts in the dermis and project through the Integumentary surface.
o Hair, hair follicles
o Sebaceous glands
o Sweat glands
o Nails
 HAIR
 75% of the hair is not on the head
 hairs are nonliving structures produced in organs called Hair Follicles
 Functions: Head: UV protection, insulation (warmth), some cushioning
Nostrils +ear canals: guarding against foreign particles and insects.
Eyelashes: similar to nostrils and external ear
 All hairs are sensory receptors
 Each hair follicle is connected to root hair plexus (nerve fibers at the end of the follicle.
 You can feel a single hair moving
 Arrector pili muscle: smooth muscle that contracts under certain conditions it contracts
due to cold temp. , certain emotions, fear, rage…
 Hair Production:
o Hair follicles produce cells that get pushed up and keratinized.
o Living cells at bottom after being keratinized and pushed up, the cells become dead
 Hair Growth Cycle:

4
o Scalp hair grows for 2-5 yrs. at a rate of .33 mm per day.
o Nutrients get incorporated into hair structures
o Heavy metals, drugs  can be detected.
o DNA available from cells at the base of hairs
o A person loses about 50 hairs per day from the head normal
o Vellus Hairs- “peach fuzz” localized on much of the body surface
o Terminal hairs- heavier more pigmented.
o Some vellus hairs become terminal at puberty.
 Hair Color:
o Variations in the pigment made by melanocytes located at the base of the hair
o Different colors of the melanin can be dark brown, yellow brown, or red
o Pigments stop being produced with age  White hairs

 GLANDS
 2 types: sebaceous (oil) glands; Sudoriferous (sweat) glands
 SEBACEOUS Holocrine glands an oily lipid secretion into hair follicle.
 Arrector pili contractions squeeze the oil (Sebum) out onto the skin surface.
 Sebum keeps keratinized cells from getting too dry and brittle
 We like to wash away the sebum and use creams and lotions
 Sebaceous follicles: bot associated with a hair follicle but where sebaceous glands are.
 Found on face, back, chest, nipples, and external genitalia.
 Sweat glands: a.k.a.- Sudoriferous glands
 2 types: Apocrine; Merocrine
 Apocrine does not really use Apocrine secretion, it just has that name because it was
formerly believed. The real method is also Merocrine.

APOCRINE MEROCRINE (eccrine)


 in armpits, around nipples, in pubic regions  far more numerous; mostly on palms + soles
 Products are secreted into the hair follicles  Secreted directly onto the skin surface
 Sweat cloudy, potentially odorous  Begins secretion when there is temperature
 Begins secreting at puberty increase
 Good nutrient source for bacteria makes it  The sweat is 99% water, some there is some
even more smelly salt and tiny amounts of waste products

Functions of Merocrine Sweat:


 Cools surface of skin to reduce body temperature
 Fights microorganisms( sweat is slightly acidic)
 Washes surface  flush off bacteria
 Dermicidin- small peptide that is an antibiotic

Other Integumentary glands:


 Mammary glands of breasts: similar in anatomy(structure) to the Apocrine sweat glands

5
 Ceruminous glands: modified sweat glands in the passageway of the external ear
o The secretions of these glands combined with the secretions of nearby sebaceous
glands make Cerumen- ear wax. This helps to trap particles to protect the ear
drum.
 NAILS
 They protect tips of fingers and toes
 Nail body visible part; covers part of finger/ toe called Nail bed
 Nail production occurs at the nail root- not visible from the outside
 Nails have pinkish color because the underlying blood vessels
show through- except at the lunula- pale crescent where blood
vessels are blocked
 Nail body dead, tightly packed, keratinized cell
 Appearance of nails are useful to help diagnose certain diseases
 It can turn yellow, be pitted, concaved, distorted, etc.

The Response of the Integument to injury:


 Repair for the Integumentary system is based on local regulation doesn’t need signals
from nervous or endocrine system for repair.
 Callus- stem cells in stratum germinativum divide more rapidly depth of epithelium
increases
 Repair of localized Injuries: (diagram pg 170-171)
 Scab- blood clot- temporary covering to protect the wound
 Made of fibrin a protein that forms from blood proteins during the clotting response
 Cells of the Stratum Germinativum migrate along the edged of the wound to replace lost
cells.
 Macrophages move in to phagocitize debris and pathogens.
 Scar tissue  results from lots of collagen fibers produce by fibroblasts
 Damaged sweat glands, hair follicles and sweat glands are not repaired
 Keloids usually on dark skin; thickened mass of scar tissue that grows into the
surrounding tissue. Thick, raised, with shiny smooth surface.

Aging and Integumentary System:


 Germinative cell activity decreases epidermis thins
 Vitamin D3 production goes down by 75%--> muscle weakness (muscle contractions
depend on (Calcium ions) and reduced bone strength
 Activity of melanocytes decreases (no UV protection) pale skin; and become more
vulnerable to sunburn
 Sweat and Sebaceous gland activity decreases dry skin; and risk of overheating
 Blood supply to the dermis decreases skin is cools(person feels cold even when warm)
 Hair follicles produce thinner and white hairs
 Dermis thins, elastic fiber network reduced
 Integument is weaker sagging + wrinkling especially skin that’s been exposed to sun
 Skin repair more slow; danger of recurring infections

You might also like