Skin is the largest organ of the body. It is the outermost covering of the body. It is streched all over in the form of a layer. There are derived many structures and glands from the skin.
The principal components of the human(mammalian) skin are as follows :-
Skin proper can be divided into two parts :-
Epidermis :- Epidermis is the outer thinner part of the skin. It is formed of stratified epithelium piled up layer after layer. At places, the epidermis becomes thick and hard as on the palms.soles and specially on the heels.
The epidermis shows three regions :-
a) Outermost Cornified layer :- The cornified layer is the outermost layer consisting of several piled up layers of flattened dead cells.
These cells are made up of a horny protein called keratin.
The cornified layer is tough and offers resistance to three things :-
b) Middle Granular layer :- It is consist of two or three sub - layers of flattened cells.
c) Inner Malpighian Layer :- It is the innermost region of the epidermis. Its cells can actively divide to produce new cells which press and shift outward to replace the worn out cells of the outermost cornified layer.
Colouration of the skin is due to a pigment melanin contained in the cells of the malpighian layer. Quantity of this pigment is different in different human races which can lead to very light brown to dark colouration of the skin.
The dermis is the inner thick layer of connective tissue made of elastic fibres. It is tough and flexible.It is an elastic fibres, blood vessels, nerves etc.
At certain places the dermis in our skin is very thick as on the palms and soles, and very thin at other places as in the eyelids.
The dermis contains several other structures - blood vessels, nerve fibres, sensory organs, hair follicles, sweat glands etc.
The outer region of the dermis which lies next to the epidermis is raised into numerous small processes called papillae which contain blood capillaries and nerve endings. The nerve endings and sense organs here are concerned with sensation of touch and pain. The sharp sense of touch in the skin of finger tips enables the blind to read the Braille characters. There are some more sense receptors in the deeper parts, which are concerned with the sensation of pressure, pain, heat, cold etc.
Some of the derivatives of skin are Hair, Nails, Mammary glands, sweat glands and sebaceous glands.
Hair :-
Nails are hardened keratinous plate-like structures which grow as dead cells from the nail root, which lies below the skin at the base.
(i) Plate - It is hard and outer part of the nail. It is made up of dead, keratinized cells.
(ii) Bed (root) - It lies below the nail plate.
(iii) Matrix - It lies just below the skin surface at the base of the nail. It is usually visible as whitish half-moon at the base of nail, it produces new cells which on maturation push out the older one towards the tip of the nail and causes growth of the nail.
These branched glands usually open into a hair follicle though, sometimes they even open directly to the outside. They give out an oily secretion (called sebum) which makes the hair and the outer surface of the skin oily and waterproof to keep the epidermis supple and to prevent loss of water by evaporation. In cold and dry weather, the skin may become rough and leave a powdery surface when scratched; this is due to reduced secretion of oil from the sebaceous glands. In hot and humid weather, the skin becomes extra oily due to increased secretion of sebum.
Three common problems related to sebaceous glands: :-
1. Pimples - Sebum accumulation, causes growth of bacteria because it is nutritive, gets infected and results into the formation of boils and pimples.
2. Acne - Sebaceous glands get inflamed due to hormonal influence. It is one of the commonest adolescence problems.
3. Black head - Sebaceous glands of the face get enlarged due to accumulated sebum. On oxidation melanin and sebum give it a black colour named black head.
Sweat Glands :-
Each sweat gland is a simple coiled tube consisting of a deeper secretory part and an excretory part which nuns upwards to open on the surface. The outer openings are called the sweat pores. Their total number in the body is estimated at about two million. Human races belonging to hotter countries usually have more sweat pores than those belonging to colder ones.
The secretory part of a sweat gland absorbs fluid from the surrounding cells and blood capillaries of the dermis and passes it into the excretory sweat duct which pours it out on the surface. Sweating (or perspiration) goes on at all times in minute quantities (incipient or invisible perspiration), or sometimes in large quantities as during strenuous exercise or during hot and humid weather, when a person may lose as much as 1 kg per hour. The major function of sweating is to lose body heat by evaporation.
Sweat consists of about 99 per cent water, 0.2 to 0.5 per cent salts (mainly sodium chloride) and traces of urea (0.08 per cent). The urea lost through the sweat is about 1 per cent of the total urea excreted by the body. "Cold sweat" may be due to psychic influences such as fright and nervousness. Sweating may also accompany nausea and severe pain (due to loss of body salts).
The mammary (or milk) glands (Fig. 13.3) are modified sweat glands. These glands are present both in males and females. But in males, they persist only in a rudimentary state, whereas in females at puberty, they enlarge in the form of a pair of breasts. Each breast carries a central conical projection called nipple. 15-20 milk ducts open on the nipple. Each milk duct is continued inward in a branching manner to join a cluster of 15 to 20 lobes of the mammary glands. The activity of the mammary glands is related to the reproductive hormones (prolactin) and pregnancy. The milk secreted by the mammary glands is highly nutritious for the new-born baby.
Meibomian glands : These are modified sebaceous glands which open on the margins of the eyelids. Their secretion is oily and serves to lubricate the margins of the lids and to prevent the overflow of tears.
Ceruminous glands : These are modified sebaceous glands found in the auditory canal and secrete wax like substance called cerumen or earwax which lubricates and protects the delicate eardrum from dust particles and germs.
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