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Published byJulius Walton Modified over 10 years ago
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Wound Healing
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Skin Haemostasis Meet the cells Inflammation Migration Proliferation Maturation
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Integumentary system What is the integumentary system? Outer covering What organ(s) are involved? Skin What structures are involved? Hair, nails, receptors, glands
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Integumentary system Skin structure:3 layers; epidermis, dermis, hypodermis or subcutaneous. Epidermis: Outer layers (4-5) of closely packed cells. Stratum basale, Stratum spinosum, Stratum granulosum, Stratum lucidum, Stratum corneum Contains keratinocytes & melanocytes, Merkel cells & Langerhans (dendritic) cells.
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Epidermis Stratum basale is base layer where cells (keratinocytes) multiply. New cells push old cells away from blood supply. They fill with keratin, flatten & die in the corneum. Millions are shed daily. Melanocytes are in the stratum basale & produce melanin pigment Merkel cells at the epidermis-dermis junction function in touch Langerhans (dendritic) cells are phagocytes (immune system cells).
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Dermis 2 indistinct layers: papillary layer & reticular layer. Contain hair follicles, sweat (sudoriferous) glands, oil (sebaceous) glands, touch receptors and a good blood supply. Connective tissue with lots of collagen and elastic fibres made by fibroblasts
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Hypodermis Subcutaneous or superficial fascia anchors skin to underlying muscle. contains fat
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Integumentary key functions Provides external protection Regulates body temperature Sensory organ Excretion Vitamin D synthesis Immunity
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Functions 1. Regulation of body temperature primarily by sweating and changing superficial vein diameter (& blood flow) Heat conservation occurs when vasoconstriction of superficial veins re-routes warm blood deeper into the body.
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Regulation of body temperature Cooling occurs when (a) Vasodilation of superficial veins brings blood to the body surface and heat is lost to the environment by radiation convection & conduction. (b) An increase in perspiration results in increased evaporation cooling the skin but effectiveness is dependant on the humidity.
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Functions 2.Protection from mechanical damage (keratin), microbial invasion, dehydration & UV radiation (melanin) 3.Excretion for loss of some ions, water & nitrogen containing waste
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Functions 4. Sensations from sensory receptors Free nerve endings: temperature, touch, pressure & pain Hair receptors : hair movement Merkels disc: Light pressure Meissner’s corpuscle: Light pressure Ruffini’s endings: Deep pressure, stretch Pacinian corpuscle: Deep pressure, stretch
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Functions 5.Langerhans cells of the epidermis are immune system cells 6.Blood reservoir carrying 8-10% of total blood flow and is highly variable. 7.Synthesis of Vitamin D when UV rays from sun promote production of a Vitamin D precursor by the epidermis 8.Stores fat & fat soluble vitamins (A, D, E & K) 9. Cutaneous absorption and secretion 10. Social interaction
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Platelets
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Clot Retraction Contractile proteins within the platelets pull on the fibrin This pulls the edges of the broken blood vessel together
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Clot retraction (syneresis)
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Clot Destruction (Fibrinolysis) Plasminogen is converted to Plasmin Plasmin breaks down the fibrin in the clot
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Meet the cells Labile cells – Regenerate readily, involved in wound repair Stable cells – Don’t normally divide in adult, but may Permanent cells – Unable to divide, replaced by scar tissue
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Neutrophil
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Macrophage
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Epithelial cells
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Fibroblasts
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Repair Replacement of destroyed tissue by scar tissue Doesn’t perform original function Process: – fill in the wound – cover or seal the wound – shrink the wound 4 stages:
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1) Inflammatory phase Haemostasis Inflammation Vasodilation & permeability of blood vessels Phagocytotic cells (neutrophils & macrophages) eat up cell debris & bacteria Immediate to 2 - 5 days
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2) Migratory phase Clot loses fluid and hardens forming a scab Capillaries grow into damaged area
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2) Migratory phase Fibroblasts make collagen to fill in the wound
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3) Proliferative phase 2 days - 3 weeks Granulation fibroblasts lay bed of collagen, fills defect (Scar tissue) new capillaries, fragile so bleed easily Epithelialization Epithelial cells regenerate to form a new surface layer (under the scab)
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Mitosis
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4) Maturation phase Contraction Collagen fibres shorten decreasing area of scar Scab detaches Epidermis reaches normal thickness End result is a regenerated epithelial surface with an underlying area of fibrosis (the scar)
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Primary Intention minimal tissue loss e.g. clean, sutured incision
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Secondary Intention much more tissue replacement takes longer e.g. stage IV decubitus ulcer
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Primary and secondary intention
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