1 / 21

The Integumentary System

The Integumentary System. By: Me and Luciano. What is it?. It is the system composed of hair, skin and nails. A system is an association of two or more organs that work together to do something. Nail. Skin. Hair. Skin. Largest organ of the body

woody
Download Presentation

The Integumentary System

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Integumentary System By: Me and Luciano

  2. What is it? • It is the system composed of hair, skin and nails. • A system is an association of two or more organs that work together to do something Nail Skin Hair

  3. Skin • Largest organ of the body • 2 layers: dermis (lower) and epidermis (upper) • SA of 1 to 2 meters • 16% of body weight A: common sweat gland B: hair follicle C: arrector pili D: sebaceous gland E: hair shaft F: epidermis G: dermis – pars papillaris H: dermis – pars reticularis I: hypodermis

  4. Skin Parts • Arrector Pili – Erects hair during cold or emotional stress • Sebaceous Gland – Oil gland; Keeps skin from drying out • Epidermis – Upper layer of skin; Protects dermis and rest of body • Dermis – Below epidermis; Contains nerve-endings, sweat and subaceous glands, and blood and lymph vessels • Hypodermis – Independent fat cells below dermis F: epidermis G: dermis – pars papillaris H: dermis – pars reticularis I: hypodermis A: common sweat gland B: hair follicle C: arrector pili D: sebaceous gland E: hair shaft

  5. Skin Functions in Homeostasis • Protection • Body temperature regulation • Sensory reception • Water balance • Syntheses of vitamins and hormones • Absorption of materials

  6. Common Skin Pathology • Apocrine glands produce a solution that bacteria act upon to produce body odor • If the sebaceous glands become plugged and infected, it becomes a blemish or pimple • Cancer: carcinoma and melanoma • Contact dermatitis (e.g. poison ivy) • Burns – First, second and third degree • Wrinkles • Calluses • Moles • Psoriasis • Hair loss • Frostbite

  7. Common Pathology PicturesPart 2 Dermatitis Melanoma Nickel Allergy Warts Kaposi’s Saracoma

  8. Wrinkles • Major difference between young and old • Loss of elasticity • More common in light-skinned people • Cross-linking collagen fibers

  9. Thick vs. Thin

  10. Thin Skin = Thin EpidermisThick vs. Thin Part II • Epidermis of thick skin is 10x epidermis of thin. • The different is in the thickness of the st. corneum • Thickest skin on body is the thin skin on the back

  11. Miscellaneous Skin Info • Epidermis replaces itself every 15-30 days

  12. Sweat Glands(Common) • Classification-Simple coiled tubular • Secretory Units-Shape like tubules • Ducts-Unbranched • Found through out the body • Most common in forehead • Begin functioning at birth A: Common sweat gland (duct) B: Myoepithelial cell C: Common sweat gland (secretory unit)

  13. Sweat Gland ‘apocrine’(Large) • Classification-Simple coiled tubular • Secretory Units-Shape like tubules • Ducts-Unbranched • Secretory units much larger than in common glands

  14. Skin Color (pigment) • Melanin (yellow-brown-black) • Carotene (yellow- orange) - accumulates in corneum • Hemoglobin (red) • Erythema vs. Cyanosis -Influenced by blood flow, liver (jaundice)

  15. Hair • Derived from skin • Extends above the skin surface • Made of Keratin D: Cortex E: Medulla

  16. Hair follicle

  17. Hair Diseases • Baldness –Loss of hair • Hair thinning – thinning of hair • Hair graying –graying of hair

  18. Nails • Highly Keratinized, modified epidermal cells • Arises from nail bed. • Rate of growth depends on finger length

  19. Nail Diagram

  20. Nail Pathology • Nail Fungus • Ingrown nail

  21. Jason’s Bibliography Body Systems The Human Body (its structure and operation) http://www.exn.ca/human/home.cfm http://www.dermnet.org.nz http://www.kidinfo.com/health/Human_Body.html http://www.dictionary.com http://www.medicaldictionary.com/ Luciano’s Bibliography How the Body works The Human Body http://gened.emc.maricopa.edu/bio/bio181/BIOBK/BioBookINTEGUSYS.html http://www.med.sc.edu/hightower/askinnoBG/sld001.htm http://www.anatomy.gatech.edu/aging/skin/tsld001.htm Bibliography

More Related