Integumentary System: By: Tim Barclay, PHD Medically Reviewed By: Stephanie Curreli, MD, PHD Jul 16, 2019
Integumentary System: By: Tim Barclay, PHD Medically Reviewed By: Stephanie Curreli, MD, PHD Jul 16, 2019
Integumentary System: By: Tim Barclay, PHD Medically Reviewed By: Stephanie Curreli, MD, PHD Jul 16, 2019
com/anatomy/integumentary
By: Tim Barclay, PhD
Medically reviewed by: Stephanie Curreli, MD, PhD
Jul 16, 2019
INTEGUMENTARY SYSTEM
- The integumentary system is an organ system consisting of the skin, hair, nails, and
exocrine glands. The skin is only a few millimeters thick yet is by far the largest organ in the
body.
FUNCTIONS
· Protects the body's internal living tissues and organs
· Protects against invasion by infectious organisms
· Protects the body from dehydration
· Protects the body against abrupt changes in temperature
· Helps dispose of waste materials
· Acts as a receptor for touch, pressure, pain, heat, and cold
· Stores water and fat
http://sciencenetlinks.com/student-teacher-sheets/integumentary-system/
Epidermis
- The epidermis is the most superficial layer of the skin that covers almost the entire body
surface. The epidermis rests upon and protects the deeper and thicker dermis layer of the
skin.
Dermis
- The dermis is the deep layer of the skin found under the epidermis. The dermis is mostly
made of dense irregular connective tissue along with nervous tissue, blood, and blood vessels.
The dermis is much thicker than the epidermis and gives the skin its strength and elasticity.
Within the dermis there are two distinct regions: the papillary layer and the reticular layer
Hypodermis
- Deep to the dermis is a layer of loose connective tissues known as the hypodermis, subcutis,
or subcutaneous tissue. The hypodermis serves as the flexible connection between the skin
and the underlying muscles and bones as well as a fat storage area.
Hair
- Hair is an accessory organ of the skin made of columns of tightly packed dead keratinocytes
found in most regions of the body. Hair helps to protect the body from UV radiation by
preventing sunlight from striking the skin. Hair also insulates the body by trapping warm air
around the skin.
Nails
- Nails are accessory organs of the skin made of sheets of hardened keratinocytes and found
on the distal ends of the fingers and toes. Fingernails and toenails reinforce and protect the
end of the digits and are used for scraping and manipulating small objects.
Sudoriferous Glands
- Sudoriferous glands are exocrine glands found in the dermis of the skin and commonly
known as sweat glands. There are 2 major types of sudoriferous glands: eccrine sweat glands
and apocrine sweat glands.
Eccrine sweat glands are found in almost every region of the skin and produce a secretion
of water and sodium chloride. Eccrine sweat is delivered via a duct to the surface of the skin
and is used to lower the body’s temperature through evaporative cooling.
Apocrine sweat glands are found in mainly in the axillary and pubic regions of the body.
Apocrine sweat glands are inactive until puberty, at which point they produce a thick, oily
liquid that is consumed by bacteria living on the skin. The digestion of apocrine sweat by
bacteria produces body odor.
Sebaceous Glands
- Sebaceous glands are exocrine glands found in the dermis of the skin that produce an oily
secretion known as sebum. Sebum acts to waterproof and increase the elasticity of the skin.
Sebum also lubricates and protects the cuticles of hairs as they pass through the follicles to
the exterior of the body.
Ceruminous Glands
- Ceruminous glands are special exocrine glands found only in the dermis of the ear canals.
Ceruminous glands produce a waxy secretion known as cerumen to protect the ear canals and
lubricate the eardrum. Cerumen protects the ears by trapping foreign material such as dust
and airborne pathogens that enter the ear canal.
Temperature Homeostasis
- Being the body’s outermost organ, the skin is able to regulate the body’s temperature by
controlling how the body interacts with its environment. In the case of the body entering a
state of hyperthermia, the skin is able to reduce body temperature through sweating and
vasodilation. In the case of the body entering a state of hypothermia, the skin is able to raise
body temperature through the contraction of arrector pili muscles and through
vasoconstriction.
Vitamin D Synthesis
- Vitamin D, an essential vitamin necessary for the absorption of calcium from food, is
produced by ultraviolet (UV) light striking the skin. When UV light present in sunlight or
tanning bed lights strikes the skin, it penetrates through the outer layers of the epidermis and
strikes some of the molecules of 7-dehydrocholesterol, converting it into vitamin D3. Vitamin
D3 is converted in the kidneys into calcitriol, the active form of vitamin D. When our skin is
not exposed to sufficient amounts of sunlight, we can develop vitamin D deficiency,
potentially leading to serious health concerns.
Protection
- The skin provides protection to its underlying tissues from pathogens, mechanical damage,
and UV light. Pathogens, such as viruses and bacteria, are unable to enter the body through
unbroken skin due to the outermost layers of epidermis containing an unending supply of
tough, dead keratinocytes. This protection explains the necessity of cleaning and covering cuts
and scrapes with bandages to prevent infection.
Skin Color
- Human skin color is controlled by the interaction of 3 pigments: melanin, carotene, and
hemoglobin.
Melanin is a brown or black pigment produced by melanocytes to protect the skin from UV
radiation. Melanin gives skin its tan or brown coloration and provides the color of brown or
black hair.
Carotene is another pigment present in the skin that produces a yellow or orange cast to
the skin and is most noticeable in people with low levels of melanin.
Hemoglobin is the red pigment found in red blood cells, but can be seen through the
layers of the skin as a light red or pink color. Hemoglobin is most noticeable in skin coloration
during times of vasodilation when the capillaries of the dermis are open to carry more blood
to the skin’s surface.
Cutaneous Sensation
- The skin allows the body to sense its external environment by picking up signals for touch,
pressure, vibration, temperature, and pain. Merkel disks in the epidermis connect to nerve
cells in the dermis to detect shapes and textures of objects contacting the skin. The density of
these sensory receptors in the skin varies throughout the body, resulting in some regions of
the body being more sensitive to touch, temperature, or pain than other regions.
Excretion
In addition to secreting sweat to cool the body, eccrine sudoriferous glands of the skin also
excrete waste products out of the body. Sweat produced by eccrine sudoriferous glands
normally contains mostly water with many electrolytes and a few other trace chemicals.
https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/melanoma/symptoms-causes/syc-20374884
https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/154322.php
https://www.cancer.org/cancer/melanoma-skin-cancer/treating/by-stage.html
MELANOMA
Melanoma is a form of skin cancer that arises when pigment-producing cells—known as
melanocytes—mutate and become cancerous.
Melanomas can develop anywhere on the skin, but certain areas are more prone than
others. In men, it is most likely to affect the chest and the back. In women, the legs are the
most common site. Other common sites are the neck and face.
According to the National Cancer Institute, about 87,110 new melanomas were expected
to be diagnosed in 2017, and about 9,730 people were expected to die of melanoma.
CAUSES
As with all cancers, research is ongoing into the causes of melanoma.
People with certain types of skin are more prone to developing melanoma, and the following
factors are associated with an increased incidence of skin cancer:
- high freckle density or tendency to develop freckles after sun exposure
- high number of moles
- five or more atypical moles
- presence of actinic lentigines, small gray-brown spots, also known as liver spots, sun spots,
or age spots
- giant congenital melanocytic nevus, brown skin marks that present at birth, also called birth
marks
- pale skin that does not tan easily and burns, plus light-colored eyes
red or light-colored hair
- high sun exposure, particularly if it produces blistering sunburn, and especially if sun
exposure is intermittent rather than regular
- age, as risk increases with age
- family or personal history of melanoma
- having an organ transplant
- Of these, only high sun exposure and sunburn are avoidable.
The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that around 60,000 early deaths occur each
year worldwide because of excessive exposure to the sun's ultraviolet (UV) radiation. An
estimated 48,000 of these deaths are from malignant melanoma.
Avoiding overexposure to the sun and preventing sunburn can significantly lower the risk of
skin cancer. Tanning beds are also a source of damaging UV rays.
TREATMENT
Treatment of Melanoma Skin Cancer, by Stage
The type of treatment(s) your doctor recommends will depend on the stage and location of
the melanoma and on your overall health.