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INTEGUMENTARY SYSTEM C L G S B
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Your skin, also called the cutaneous membrane, is an epithelial membrane that covers the entire body.
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FUNCTIONS: Integumentary System Includes:
Protects against injury and infection Removes waste products Regulates body temperature Sense of touch Collagen ridges give us our fingerprints Integumentary System Includes: skin, glands, hair, and nails
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3 LAYERS OF THE SKIN EPIDERMIS (stratified squamous)
DERMIS (dense connective tissue) SUBCUTANEOUS TISSUE **(HYPODERMIS) adipose tissue (subcutaneous layer often not considered part of skin)
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HUM SKIN!
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EPIDERMIS “your epidermis is showing” Avascular 5 layers (strata)
Stratified squamous cells Keratinocytes produce keratin (TOUGH, fibrous protein; functions are protection and durability)
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LAYERS OF THE EPIDERMIS
FROM SUPERFICIAL TO DEEP: Stratum corneum Stratum lucidum Stratum granulosum Stratum spinosum Stratum basale
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STRATUM CORNEUM “horny layer” Outermost epidermal layer
Made up of 20 to 30 cell layers Keratinization = cells gain keratin and are constantly sloughed off and replaced by new cells
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STRATUM LUCIDUM Thin layer, but makes skin here thicker Clear, dead
keratinocytes *Only found where skin is hairless (palms and soles of feet)
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STRATUM GRANULOSUM Many granules in cells
Some granules contain a waterproof lipid and others contain keratin Upper portions are beginning to die here
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STRATUM SPINOSUM “spiny layer” Cells appear spiky
Some cell division occurs in this layer Receives some nourishment from the dermis (by diffusion of blood)
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STRATUM BASALE One row of cells right above dermis
Cells constantly reproducing through cell division Adequate blood supply from dermis Melanocytes (pigment cells) produce the pigment (MELANIN) in this layer
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How does the skin do it?? *Cells in the lower strata of the epidermis
(mostly in stratum basale and some in stratum spinosum) are constantly undergoing cell division (millions of new cells made daily) and the new cells are pushed upward, away from the blood supply of the dermis to become part of the layers that are closer to the skin’s surface. As the cells move upward toward stratum corneum they start to die off and become flatter. These cells have more protective keratin in them.
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