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Skin Structure
Layers of the Epidermis
Stratum Basale/Basal Layer
• All about that “Base”
• Deepest epidermal layer
• Attached to the Dermis beneath it along a
wavy texture
• Looks like corrugated cardboard
• Mostly single row of cells
• Continually renewing cell population
• Mitotic nuclei
Stratum Basale/Basal Layer
Also called Stratum
Germinativum
Stratum Spinosum
• “Prickly” layer
• Several cell layers thick
• Contain weblike system of intermediate
filaments
• Keratinocytes appear spiny in shape
• Langerhans’ cell are most abundant in this
layer
Stratum Spinosum
Stratum Spinosum
Stratum Granulosum
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Granular Layer
Thin – 3 to 5 cell layers thick
Keratinocyte appearance changes drastically
They flatten
Nuclei and organelles begin to disintegrate
Accumulate granules
• Keratohyaline: helps form keratin in the upper
layers
• Lamellated: contain a waterproofing glycolipid
that is spewed into the extracellular space
• Slows water loss across the epidermis
Stratum Granulosum
• Plasma membrane thickens
• Cytosol proteins bind to inner membrane
• Lipids released by lamellated granules coat
the external surface
• Process of toughening up
• Above the stratum granulosum, the
epidermal cells are too far from the dermal
capillaries, so they die
Stratum Granulosum
Stratum Granulosum
Stratum Lucidum
• Appears as thin, translucent band
• A few rows of dead, flat keratinocytes with
indistinct boundaries
• Visible only in thick skin
Stratum Lucidum
Stratum Lucidum
Stratum Corneum
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•
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•
“Horny” layer
Outermost layer of epidermis
20-30 cell layers thick
Accounts for up to ¾ of the epidermal
thickness
• Durable “overcoat” for the body
• Protects deeper cells from the hostile
external environment
Stratum Corneum
Stratum Corneum
• Cornu = horn
• Dandruff, flakes the slough off dry skin
• Average person sheds 40lb of skin flakes in
a lifetime
• When you look at someone’s skin, you are
looking at dead cells. 
Skin Structure
Dermis
Dermis
• Strong, flexible connective tissue
• Fibroblasts, macrophages, mast cells and
white blood cells
• Heavily embedded with fibers
• Binds the body together like a stocking
• Your “hide”
Dermis
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Nerve fibers
Blood vessels
Lymphatic vessels
Hair follicles
Oil and sweat glands
2 layers
• Papillary & reticular
Papillary
• Areolar connective tissue
• Heavily invested with blood vessels
• Dermal papillae
Dermal Papillae
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Contain capillary loops
Free nerve endings (pain receptors)
Meisners corpuscles (touch receptors)
Dermal ridges
• Cause the epidermis to form epidermal ridges
• Friction
• Epidermal ridge patterns (fingerprints)
• Sweat pores open along their crests
Reticular Layer
• 80% of thickness
• Dense irregular connective tissue
• Cutaneous plexus
• Network of blood vessels that nourishes dermal
layer
• Between reticular layer and hypodermis
Reticular Layer
• Extracellular Matrix
• Thick bundles of interlacing collagen fibers that
run in various planes
• Most run parallel to the skin surface
• Tension/cleavage lines
• Surgery and healing
Reticular Layer
• Collagen fibers
• Strength and resiliency prevents most jabs and
scrapes from penetrating the dermis
• Collagen binds water, keeping skin hydrated
Reticular Layer
• Flexure lines
• Dermal folds that occur at or near joints where
the dermis is tightly secured to deeper
structures
• Ex. Palms of hands
Homeostatic Imbalance
• Extreme stretching of the skin can tear the
dermis. What is this called?
• Short-term but acute trauma can cause a
separation of the dermal and epidermal
layers by a fluid filled pocket. What is this
called?
Skin Color
Skin Color
• 3 pigments contribute to skin color
• Melanin
• Carotene
• Hemoglobin
Melanin
• Only melanin is made in the skin
• Polymer that ranges in color from yellow to
reddish-brown to black
• Its synthesis depends on an enzyme in
melanocytes , tyrosinase
• All humans have the same number of
melanocytes
• Differences in skin color reflect the kind
and amount of melanin made and retained
Melanin
• Freckles and pigmented moles are local
accumulations of melanin
• Melanocytes are stimulated by exposure to
sunlight
• Melanin buildup is designed to help protect
the DNA of viable skin cells from UV
radiation and dissipating the energy as heat
Melanin
• Initial signal for speeding up melanin
synthesis appears to be a faster rate of repair
of photodamaged DNA
• This causes a physiological response.
• What is this response called?
Carotene
• Yellow to orange pigment found in certain
plant products
• Tends to accumulate in the stratum corneum
and fatty tissue of the hypodermis
• Most obvious where the stratum corneum is
the thickest (skin of the heels)
Hemoglobin
• Pinkish hue of fair skin
• Reflecting the crimson color of oxygenated
hemoglobin in the red blood cells
circulating through the dermal capillaries
• Because Caucasion skin contains only small
amounts of melanin, the epidermis is nearly
transparent and allows hemoglobin’s color
to show through
Hemoglobin
Skin Appendages
Nails, sweat glands, sebaceous
glands, hair follicles, hair
Sudoiferous Glands
• Also called sweat glands
• Include eccrine & apocrine glands
• Distributed over practically entire surface of
body
• Up to 3million per person
Eccrine
• Also called merocrine glands
• Most numerous
• Abundant on palms, soles of feet, and
forehead
• Simple, coiled, tubular
• True “sweat”: 99% water, salts, vitamin C,
antibodies, and microbe-killing peptide
• Sweat normally has a pH of 4-6
Eccrine
• Heat induced sweating begins on the
forehead and then spreads out
• Emotional, or “cold sweat” begins on the
palms, soles, and armpits
Apocrine
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Confined to axillary and anogenital areas
Larger than eccrine glands
Ducts empty into hair follicles
Secrete True sweat plus fatty substances
and proteins
• Odorless, but when bacteria decomposes its
organic compounds, causes body odor
• Begin functioning at puberty
Ceruminous
• Modified apocrine glands
• Found in external ear canal
• Secrete sticky bitter substance: earwax
Mammary
• Secrete milk
Sebaceous (oil) glands
• Are branched alveolar glands found all over
the body except on the palms and soles
• Small on the body trunk and limbs, but
large on the face neck, and upper chest
• Secrete oily substance: sebum
• Sebum is secreted into the hair follicle or
occasionally to a pore on the skin surface
Sebaceous
• Sebum softens and lubricates the hair and
skin, prevents hair from becoming brittle,
and slows water loss from the skin
• Has bactericidal action also
Homeostatic Imbalance
• When a sebaceous gland is blocked by
accumulated sebum and dead skin cells: whitehead
• When a whitehead oxidizes and dries it becomes a
blackhead
• Acne is an active inflammations of the sebaceous
glands, usually caused by bacteria
• Cradle crap: in infants caused by overactive
sebaceous glands
• Begins as pink lesions that gradually become
yellow to brown and slough off oily scales