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IN THE NAME OWNER OF BEAUTY 1 The Integumentary System Instructor: Shahnaz pouladi Bushehr Medical Science University Nursing and Midwifery Faculty 2 Three Layers of skin: Epidermis: Stratified squamous epithelium; outer layer is "keratinized" or "cornified" Dermis: Dense irregular connective tissue Hypodermis: Adipose connective tissue (technically not 3 part of system) Epidermis: Avascular. Depends on blood vessels in underlying dermis for its nutrition Cells formed by mitosis in deepest, or basal layer, then get pushed into more superficial layers or "strata" 4 (Epidermis) Stratum Basale = Single row of dividing cells Stratum Spinosum = Three or four layers of cells; Some cell division Stratum Granulosum = Three or four layers of cells; Actively synthesizing protein keratin Stratum Lucidum = One or two layers of dying cells Stratum Corneum = Many layers of flat, dead, scale-like cells full of keratin 5 Primary cell type in epidermis = keratinocytes which produce large amounts of protein keratin Other cell types: Melanocytes produce pigment melanin & transfer it to keratinocytes Langerhans cells (really macrophages) clean up debris Merkel cells detect touch and pressure; transfer this information to sensory receptors in the dermis 6 Functions of the skin • 1. Protection – First line of defense – Keratin: protects body from water loss, barrier for environmental factors (stratum corneum) – Melanin: keeps UV rays from penetrating – Surface film: sweat, oil, etc – Basal layer: composed of collagen(tissue organization and regeneration, selective permeability, physical barrier, bind) 7 Functions of the skin • 2. Sensation – Pressure, touch, temp, pain, etc – Two specialized receptors: • Meissner corpuscle – detects light pressure • Pacinian corpuscle – detects deep pressure 8 Functions of the skin • 3. Fluid balance • The stratum corneum has the capacity to absorb water • Skin damage (burn) • The skin is not completely impermeable to water. (evaporation) 600cc/day 9 Functions of the skin • 4. Body temperature – Body produces heat (metabolism of foods) – Body releases 80% of heat through skin – On a hot day the skin releases almost 3000 calories of body heat (enough to boil five gallons of water) – Heat loss is controlled by negative feedback loop – Skin blood flow 10 Functions of the skin • 3. Produces Vitamin D – Uv rays combine with skin to make cholecalciferol – Cholecalciferol is transported to the liver and kidneys where it is changed to vit D – Vitamin D is essential for preventing osteoprosis 11 Functions of the skin • Immune response function • Langerhans cells facilitate the uptake of IgEassociated allergens 12 Skin and Aging Process 13 Assessment of the Skin 14 Preparation • • • • • • • • 15 Equipment Well-lit Room Comfortable Environment Hand washing Appropriate use of Gloves Privacy/Draping Organized Assessment Explanations PHYSICAL ASSESSMENT 16 Physical Assessment • Inspection – Color – Bleeding – Ecchymosis – Vascularity – Lesions 17 Physical Assessment • Palpation – Moisture – Temperature – Texture – Turgor – Edema 18 • Color – Normal=Uniformed whitish pink or brown – Abnormal • • • • • 19 Cyanosis Jaundice Carotenemia Albinism Vitiligo Cyanosis 20 Jaundice 21 Carotenemia 22 Albinism 23 Vitiligo 24 Physical Assessment • Bleeding, Ecchymosis, Vascularity – Normal=No areas – Abnormal • • • • • 25 Spontaneous Bleeding Petechiae Ecchymosis Venous Star Necrosis Petechiae 26 Ecchymosis 27 Venous Star 28 Necrosis 29 Lesions • Lesions – Normal=No lesions except freckles, birthmarks, nevi (flat moles) – Abnormal • Rashes • Pressure Ulcers • Burns 30 SKIN LESIONS 31 Kind of lesions in dermatology 1- Primary Skin Lesions 2-Secondary Skin Lesions 32 PRIMARY LESIONS 33 macule • Flat, circumscribed skin discoloration that lacks surface elevation or depression • Lesser than 1cm • Vitiligo 34 Patch • Flat, circumscribed skin discoloration, a very large macule • Vitiligo 35 Papule • Elevated, solid lesion <0.5 cm in diameter • B.C.C • Intradermal Nevi 36 Plaque • Elevated, solid”confluence of papule”>0.5 cm in diameter that lacks a deep component • Psoriasis 37 Nodule • Elevated, solid lesion>0.5 cm in diameter, a largerdeeper papule • Lipoma • Rheumatoid nudule 38 Vesicle • Plaque that contains clear fluid ,a blister • Lesser than .5 cm • Herpes simplex • Herpes zoster • Contact dermatitis 39 Bulla • Localized fluid collection>0.5 cm in diameter, a large vesicle • Pemphigus vulgaris • Bullous impetigo 40 Pustule • Vesicle or bulla that contains purulent material • • • • 41 Folliculitis Impetigo Acne Pustular psoriasis Wheal (Hive) • Firm,edematous,plaque that is evanescent and pruritic • Urticaria 42 Cyst • Nodule that contains fluid semisolidmaterial • Sebaceous cyst • Epidermal cysts 43 SECONDARY LESIONS 44 Crust • A collection of cellular debris ,dried serum, and blood • Impetigo • Herpes, eczema 45 Erosion • A partial focal loss of epidermis, heals without scarring • Ruptured vesicles • Scratch marks 46 Scale • Thick stratum corneum that results from hyperproliferation or increased cohesion of keratinocytes • dandruff • Psoriasis • Dry skin 47 Ulcer • A full-thickness, focal loss of dermis, heals with scarring • Bed sore • Syphlis 48 Fissure • Vertical loss of epidermis and dermis with sharply defined walls, crack in skin • Chapped lips or hands 49 Scar • A collection of new connective tissue, may be hypertrophic or atrohic scar • Burn • Acne 50 Atrophy • Thinning of the epidermis, dermis or fat that cause depression in the skin surface • Aged skin 51 Lichenification • Focal area of thickened skin produced by chronic scratching or rubbing • Contact Dermatitis 52 Keloid • Hypertrophied scar tissue, elevated, irregular, • Surgical incision 53 BACTERIAL SKIN INFECTIONS 54 Folliculitis, Furuncles, Carbuncles • Folliculitis is an infection of bacterial or fungal origin that arises within the hair follicles • Lesions may be superficial or deep • Single or multiple papules or pustules appear close to the hair folicle • Beard area in men and women’s leg • Usually caused by staph. • Pseudofolliculitis barbae (shaving bumps) 55 Folliculitis 56 Furuncle • An acute inflammation arising deep in one or more hair follicle and spreading into the surrounding dermis • Furunculosis is multiple or recurrent lesions • Occur anywhere and more in pressure area • Start as a small, red, raised, painful pimple after a few days convert to furuncle (center become yellow or black) 57 Furuncle 58 Carbuncle • An abscess of the skin and subcutaneous tissue that represents an extension of a furuncle that has invaded several follicles and is large and deep seated. • Usually caused by a staph • Appear most commonly in thick skin and inelastic • Result fever, pain, leukocytosis • More likely in pt. with underlying systemic disease (diabetes, hematologic malignancy, in person that use immune suppressive drugs) 59 Carbuncle 60 Medical management • • • • • • 61 Not to rupture protective wall of leasons The boil or pimple should never be squeezed Systematic antibiotic therapy: Oral cloxacillin and dicloxacillin Cephalosporin and erythromycin When the pus has localized small, incision and drainage induced NONINFECTIOUS INFLAMMATORY DERMATOSIS 62 Psoriasis • The most common skin disease • 2% of population • A chronic disease stem from a hereditary defect that cause overproduction of keratin • Most common in 15-35 years • Pathophysiology - Immunologic basis • Trigger factors - Emotional stress, trauma, infections, seasonal and hormonal changes - The cell in the basal layer of the skin divide too quickly and 63 the normal events of cell maturation and growth cannot occur Psoriasis • C/M • Red lesions with raised patches of skin covered with silvery scales that are pruritic • Involve the nails in one half of the pt. with pitting, discoloration, beneath the free edges, and separation of the nail plate • Bilateral symmetry of lesions • Most in scalp, elbow, knee, back, genitalia, nail • Arthritis 64 Psoriasis • Assessment and diagnostic finding - Presence of the classic plaque-type lesions - Sign of nail and scalp - Skin biopsy has little diagnostic value 65 Psoriasis • - 66 M/M Control of stress Pharmacologic therapy: Topical agents: topical corticosteroids and covering skin with occlusive dressing, nonsteroidal treatments are calcipotriene ( a synthetic derivative of calcitriol or vitamin D) and tazarotene ( topical retinoid) Systemic agents: Infliximab (a monoclonal antibody against tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α) used to treat autoimmune diseases) Etanercept (a TNF inhibitor) Efalizumb ( monoclonal antibody) Alefacept ( immunosuppressive drug) Adalimumab (the third TNF inhibitor) M/M in Psoriasis - Oral agents: methotrexate, cyclosporine A (an immunosuppressant drug )oral retinoids (Etretinate) - Photochemotherapy: photosensitizing oral medication with exposure to ultraviolet-A light (PUVA). - Photosensitizing medication (8methoxypsoralen) - Phototherapy in the ultraviolet-B (UVB) 67 Psoriasis 68 BLISTERING DISEASE 69 Pemphigus • Pemphigus is a group of serious disease of the skin characterized by the appearance of bullae. • An autoimmune disease involving IgG • A blister forms from the antigen-antibody • Highest incidence in Jewish or Mediterranean • Associated with penicillins and captopril and myasthenia gravis • C/M • Oral lesions that are painful, bleed easily and oozing, Nikolsky’s sign • Complications : secondary bacterial infection, fluid and electrolyte imbalance, hypoalbuminemia 70 Pemphigus • M/M • Goals : prevent loss of serum and the development of secondary infection and to promote reepithelization • Corticosteroid priscription • Immunosuppressive agents : azathioprine, cyclophosphamide, gold • plasmapheresis 71 Pemphigus 72