U3 Summative - Integumentary System Flashcards

1
Q

Skin Functions

A
  • Makes skin tough (keratin)
  • Barrier to penetration/injury
  • Contains immune system cells (macrophages/langerhans cells: engulfs bacteria, found in the stratum spinosum)
  • Regulates body temp. (maintains homeostasis)
  • Houses sensory receptors
  • Composed of several tissues
  • Retards water loss (stratum corneum)
  • Excretes small amounts of waste (sweat)
  • Synthesizes chemicals
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2
Q

Skin varies in thickness mostly due to:

A

variations in the stratum corneum (the uppermost layer)

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3
Q

Epidermis

A

TOP LAYER - Stratified squamous epithelium, avascular, “cornified” with protein keratin, uses diffusion

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4
Q

Layers of Skin

A

Epidermis
Dermis
Hypodermis

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5
Q

Stratum Basale (Melanocytes, Merkel Cell/Disc, Cell Production)

A

Found in the basement membrane of the epidermis! Keratinocytes give rise to most new epidermal cells that are pushed outward during cell division, melanocytes (produce melanin), merkel cells/discs in conjunction with a dermal nerve ending, form a tactile/touch receptor

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6
Q

Stratum Spinosum (Macrophages/Langerhans cells)

A

Macrophages (called Langerhans cells) are present in this layer and the stratum granulosum, mitosis happens here, several layers of flattened keratinocytes, comprised of filaments making the skin flexible/strong

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7
Q

Statum Granulosum

A

This layer consists of two to five layers of cells with granules of keratohyalin (living cells); living keratinocytes creating keratin/adding keratin to new cells

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8
Q

Stratum Lucidum

A

Clear & thin, only seen in thick skin such as the soles of the feet and palms

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9
Q

Stratum Corneum

A

The stratum corneum is made up of 25-30 layers
of dead, keratinized cells.
A waterproof, protective outer layer.

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10
Q

Dermis

A

Dermis: composed of fibroconnective tissue, with blood vessels, nerve endings,
sweat glands, hair follicles, and nail roots

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11
Q

Papillary Dermis

A

Zone of areolar tissue (loose CT) closest to the epidermis, projecting upward as dermal papillae,
blood vessels extend close to the epidermis within the papillae,
the large number of white blood cells within this layer helps prevent infection

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12
Q

Reticular Dermis

A

Dense irregular connective tissue, stretching of the skin causes tears in this area,
called linea albicantes, or stretch marks

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13
Q

Hypodermis aka subcutaneous layer

A

Loose CT (adipose tissue), insulates, major BVs present, stores energy, fatty bottom layer

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14
Q

Dermal Vitamin D Synthesis

A
  1. UV radiation can penetrate into the dermis where it reaches 7-DEHYDROCHOLESTEROL found in blood/dermis
  2. UV- rays convert it into CHOLECALCIFEROL
  3. Kidneys/liver turn it into CALCITRIOL (active Vitamin D)
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15
Q

Cutaneous Absorption

A

blood receives 1-2% of O2 through the skin, many compounds can be absorbed through the skin!

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16
Q

Thermoregulation

A

dermail BVs contrict or dilate depending on temp. (sweat allows for evaporative cooling)

17
Q

Sensory Roles/Cutaneous Sensory Receptors/Corpuscles

A

Nerve endings, allows for sense and touch signals sent to the brain to be processed

18
Q

Hair (Pili)

A
  • Made of hard keratin
  • Accessory to the skin
  • Growth of hair is due to mitosis in the cells in the stratum basale
19
Q

Lanugo

A

Covers the fetus before birth

20
Q

Vellus

A

Fine, unpigmented hair found all over the body

21
Q

Terminal hair

A

long, coarse, and pigemented; found on scalp, face (men), and axillary and pelvic regions after puberty

22
Q

Vibrissae

A

Short, “guard” hairs (found in nostrils)

23
Q

Arector pili muscle

A

Erects the hair follicles aka “goosebumps”

24
Q

Structure of nails

A
  • Nail plate/protective, hard-keratin covering
    -Nail bed
  • Lunula (above cuticle)
  • Version of stratum corneum
25
Q

Sudoriferous Glands

A

the most numerous cutaneous (skin) glands.
Sweat: mostly water; also, salts, ammonia, urea, sugar, uric acid, lactic acid, ascorbic and amino acids.

26
Q

Eccrine sweat glands

A

all over the body, produce watery perspiration to cool the body; ducts to skin surface,
functional before and after puberty, sweat not very viscous

27
Q

Apocrine sweat glands

A

developed during puberty, odorous, found in the groin, axilla, breast areola

28
Q

Sebaceous glands

A

Everywhere minus the palms and soles; produces an oily sebum to moisturize skin and hair

29
Q

Ceruminous glands

A

Found in ears, earwax

30
Q

Breast/mammary sweat glands

A

Produces milk (for females)

31
Q

Burns

A
  • First-degree burns
    involve only the epidermis
  • Second-degree burns
    involve the epidermis and upper dermis
  • Third-degree burns destroy the skin and deeper tissue (blackened)
32
Q

___% of your blood is in your skin?

A

5%

33
Q

How skin repairs itself:

A

Capillaries constrict to lessen bleeding, platlets plug the wound, inflammation, white blood cells clense the wound, fibroblasts build tissue, specialized fibroblasts close/constrict the wound, re-epithelialization

34
Q

The skin as we age:

A
  • Scaly skin
  • Age spots
  • Dermis becomes reduced
  • Loss of fat
  • Wrinkles
  • Sagging
  • Sebaceous glands secrete less oil
  • Melanin production slows
  • Hair thins
  • Number of hair follicles decrease
  • Impaired nail growth
  • Sensory receptors decline
  • Inability to control body temperature
  • Less vitamin D production
35
Q

Keratinization

A

involves keratinocytes, process by which cells in the epidermis produce and accumulate to make the skin waterproof and durable (stratum corneum must be strong to prevent injury/penetration)