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Associate Professor: Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan Dina A.A. Hassan -Associative professor in pharmacology -Pharmacology department -College of Pharmacy -Sattam Ben Abdulaziz University , Al Kharge Email : [email protected]. [email protected]

Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan -Associative professor in pharmacology -Pharmacology department -College of

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Page 1: Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan -Associative professor in pharmacology -Pharmacology department -College of

Associate Professor: Associate Professor: Dina A.A. HassanDina A.A. Hassan-Associative professor in pharmacology -Pharmacology department-College of Pharmacy-Sattam Ben Abdulaziz University , Al Kharge Email : [email protected]. [email protected]

Page 2: Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan -Associative professor in pharmacology -Pharmacology department -College of

INTEGUMENTARY SYSTEM

Dr Dina Allam Hassan

Page 3: Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan -Associative professor in pharmacology -Pharmacology department -College of

OBJECTIVESOBJECTIVES At the end of this lecture , you should be able to:

-Define and enumerate the structure of the Integumentary system

-Describe layers of the skin in details and function of each layer.

--Define and locate hypodermal layer and its related functions .

-Discuss the structure and function of hair follicles, nail , sweet and sebaceous glans ( which are collectively called Skin Appendages).

Page 4: Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan -Associative professor in pharmacology -Pharmacology department -College of

The Integumentary The Integumentary SystemSystem

Integumentary system is the skin and the organs derived from it (hair, glands, nails)

It is also one of the largest organs◦ Largest sense organ in the body Integument is skin

STRUCTURE OF THE SKIN:STRUCTURE OF THE SKIN: Two distinct regions

◦ Epidermis◦ Dermis◦ A fatty layer (hypodermis) lies deep to it

Page 5: Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan -Associative professor in pharmacology -Pharmacology department -College of

Skin Appendages

Derived from epidermis but extend into dermis

IncludeHair and hair folliclesSebaceous (oil) glandsSweat glandsNails

Page 6: Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan -Associative professor in pharmacology -Pharmacology department -College of

Functions of SkinFunctions of Skin

Protection◦ Cushions and insulates and is waterproof◦ Protects from chemicals, heat, cold, bacteria◦ Screens UV

Synthesizes of vitamin D with UV Regulates body heat Prevents unnecessary water loss Sensory reception (nerve endings)

Page 7: Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan -Associative professor in pharmacology -Pharmacology department -College of

Structure of the skin

Histologically the skin is formed of two distinct regions:

1- Epidermis2- Dermis N.B: A fatty layer (hypodermis) lies deep to it

Page 8: Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan -Associative professor in pharmacology -Pharmacology department -College of

Epidermis and Epidermis and DermisDermis

◦Epidermis is avascular (no blood vessels)◦Dermis is highly vascular (has blood vessels)◦Epidermis receives nourishment from dermis◦Cells far away from nourishment die

Page 9: Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan -Associative professor in pharmacology -Pharmacology department -College of

1-Epidermis1-Epidermis Four types of cells

◦ Keratinocytes – produce keratin (tough fibrous protein) Keratinized stratified squamous epithelium

◦ Melanocytes - make dark skin pigment melanin ◦ Merkel cells – associated with sensory nerve endings ◦ Langerhans cells – macrophage-like dendritic cells

Layers of keratinocytes(from deep to superficial)◦ Stratum basale or germinativum – single row of cells attached to dermis; youngest

cells and actively divide by mitosis to form new cells which forms the more superficial layers

◦ Stratum spinosum or spinous layer – spine is artifactual; it contains tonofilaments (bundles of protein) resist tension

◦ Stratum granulosum or granular layer – layers of flattened keratinocytes producing keratin (hair and nails made of it also)

◦ Stratum lucidum or clear layer-(present only on thick skin as palms and soles)◦ Stratum corneum or horny layer –it is a dead layer that appears as flat membrane

filled with keratin. (cells dead, many layers thick)

Page 10: Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan -Associative professor in pharmacology -Pharmacology department -College of

FUNCTION OF KERATINOCYES :FUNCTION OF KERATINOCYES :

Cell renewal and formation of keratin.

Page 11: Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan -Associative professor in pharmacology -Pharmacology department -College of

2- Dermis2- Dermis See next picture 1)This layer locates deeper to dermis 2)It is formed of strong connective tissue 3)It is rich supply in nerves and blood vessels. 4)This layer is formed of two layers (see next slides)

◦ Papillary layer that includes dermal papillae and formed of areolar connective tissue that rich in connective tissue cells(fibroblast, macrophages, mast cells) .

◦ Reticular layer – “reticulum” under the papillary layer and formed of networks of collagen and reticular fibers. That is why it is called reticular layer

FUNCTION OF DERMIS :FUNCTION OF DERMIS :It has a critical role in temperature regulation (rich in blood

vessels)

Page 12: Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan -Associative professor in pharmacology -Pharmacology department -College of

*Dermis layers

*

*

*Dermal papillae

Page 13: Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan -Associative professor in pharmacology -Pharmacology department -College of

Hypodermis

* It is also called : 1-“Hypodermis” = that means below the skin 2-“Subcutaneous” = that means below the skin 3- “superficial fascia” “fascia” (Latin) =in anatomy it means sheet of connective tissue Structure of hypodermis: It is formed of fatty tissue FUNCTIONS OF HYPODERMIS : * it is formed of fatty tissue which stores fat * it anchors skin to the underlying structure

Page 14: Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan -Associative professor in pharmacology -Pharmacology department -College of
Page 15: Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan -Associative professor in pharmacology -Pharmacology department -College of

Skin colorSkin color Three skin pigments

◦ Melanin: the most important◦ Carotene: from carrots ◦ Hemoglobin: the pink of light skin

Melanin in granules passes from melanocytes (same number in all races) to keratinocytes in stratum basale◦ Digested by lysosomes◦ Variations in color◦ Function of melanin : Protection from UV light vs

vitamin D?

Page 16: Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan -Associative professor in pharmacology -Pharmacology department -College of

NailsNails 1- It is formed of hard keratin 2- it grows from nail matrix

Page 17: Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan -Associative professor in pharmacology -Pharmacology department -College of

Hair and hair follicles: complexHair and hair follicles: complex

*

Hair papilla is connective tissue________________

Hair bulb: epithelial cells surrounding papilla

1- Hair and hair follicles are derived from epidermis and dermis2- usually they are present everywhere exceptexcept palms, soles, nipples, parts of genitalia

Page 18: Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan -Associative professor in pharmacology -Pharmacology department -College of

Functions of hair: Functions of hair: ◦ Warmth – less in human than other mammals◦ Sense light touch of the skin◦ Protection - Especially in the scalp

Parts hair: Parts hair: ◦ Root imbedded in skin◦ Shaft projecting above skin surface

Make up of hair Make up of hair – hard keratin Three concentric layersThree concentric layers

◦ Medulla (core)◦ Cortex (surrounds medulla)◦ Cuticle (single layers, overlapping)

Page 19: Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan -Associative professor in pharmacology -Pharmacology department -College of

Types of hairTypes of hair◦ Vellus: fine, short hairs◦ Intermediate hairs ◦ Terminal: longer, courser hair

Hair growth: Hair growth: averages 2 mm/week◦ Active: growing◦ Resting phase ◦ shed

Hair loss:Hair loss:◦ Thinning – age related◦ Male pattern baldness

Hair color:Hair color:◦ Increase mount of melanin for black or brown colour;◦ Distinct form of melanin for red colour◦ White: decreased melanin and air bubbles in the medulla

Page 20: Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan -Associative professor in pharmacology -Pharmacology department -College of

Sebaceous (oil) GlandsSebaceous (oil) Glands These glands usually connected to hair follicles

They are present in entire skin of the body(thin skin) except palms and soles (thick skin).

FUNCTION :FUNCTION : - Produce sebum - Sebum is an Oily material that lubricates hair.

Page 21: Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan -Associative professor in pharmacology -Pharmacology department -College of

Sweat GlandsSweat Glands

- These glands present in the entire thin skin surface except nipples and part of external genitalia

- In humans sweet gland are efficient ( but in animals only mammals have efficient sweet glands )

FUNCTION:FUNCTION: 1- Produce sweet in response to stress as well as heat 2- Prevent overheating

Page 22: Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan -Associative professor in pharmacology -Pharmacology department -College of

Use the following vocabulary to label the diagram: hair shaft, oil (sebaceous)gland, fat cells, erector pili muscle, blood vessels, nerve endings, epidermis, dermis, epithelial cells, hair follicle, sweat gland, connective tissue

Page 23: Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan Associate Professor: Dina A.A. Hassan -Associative professor in pharmacology -Pharmacology department -College of