Layers of the Skin - The Body's Armor

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Epidermis: Avascular, keratinized stratified squamous epithelium. Layers from superficial to deep:
- S. Corneum: Anucleated cells, keratin.
- S. Lucidum: Clear layer; only in thick skin (palms/soles).
- S. Granulosum: Keratohyalin granules.
- S. Spinosum: Desmosomes (intercellular bridges).
- S. Basale: Mitotically active stem cells, melanocytes.
- 📌 Mnemonic: Come, Let's Get Sun Burned.
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Dermis: Supports epidermis; contains blood vessels, nerves, and appendages.
- Papillary Layer: Loose connective tissue.
- Reticular Layer: Dense, irregular connective tissue.
⭐ Langerhans cells (dendritic, antigen-presenting immune cells) are most prominent in the Stratum Spinosum.
Cells of the Epidermis - The Skin's Crew
- Keratinocytes (~90%): The workhorses. Originate in the basal layer, mature upwards. Produce keratin for strength and form the waterproof barrier.
- Melanocytes (~5%): Located in the stratum basale. Synthesize melanin pigment from tyrosine, protecting against UV radiation. Derived from the neural crest.
- Langerhans Cells (2-3%): Dendritic cells in the stratum spinosum. Act as antigen-presenting cells (APCs). 📌 Birbeck granules (tennis-racket shape) are characteristic.
- Merkel Cells (~1%): Found in the stratum basale. Slow-adapting mechanoreceptors for light touch.
⭐ Albinism results from a normal number of melanocytes but a lack of tyrosinase, the key enzyme for melanin production.

Skin Appendages - Hairy, Sweaty, Oily Bits

- Hair Follicles
- Anchors hair shaft; associated with arrector pili muscles (piloerection).
- Cycles: Anagen (growth), Catagen (involution), Telogen (rest).
- Sebaceous Glands
- Produce oily/waxy sebum; lubricates skin & hair.
- Holocrine secretion: whole cell disintegrates.
- Outflow is typically into a hair follicle.
- Sweat (Sudoriferous) Glands
- Eccrine: Everywhere; for thermoregulation. Secretes watery sweat via merocrine secretion.
- Apocrine: Axillae, genitals. Active at puberty. Viscous, odorless fluid that bacteria make odorous.
⭐ High-Yield: Despite the name, apocrine sweat glands also use merocrine secretion (exocytosis), not apocrine secretion (decapitation). This is a common exam trap!
Dermatomes & Innervation - The Nerve Map

- A dermatome is an area of skin supplied by sensory fibers from a single spinal nerve (dorsal root).
- Key anatomical landmarks for testing:
- C4: High collar shirt (clavicles/upper shoulders)
- T4: Nipple line (teat pore)
- T10: Umbilicus (belly but-ten)
- L4: Kneecaps (down on all L4s)
- S2-S4: Perineal sensation
⭐ Herpes zoster (shingles) infection causes a painful, unilateral vesicular rash that is limited to a single dermatome and does not cross the midline.
Burns & Healing - Trial by Fire
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Classification (Depth):
- 1st: Epidermis only (e.g., sunburn); erythema, painful.
- 2nd: Epidermis + Dermis; blistering, very painful.
- 3rd: Full-thickness; white/leathery, painless.
- 4th: Extends to fascia, muscle, or bone.
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Severity: Total Body Surface Area (TBSA) via "Rule of Nines."

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Healing Phases:
⭐ Curling's Ulcer: Acute gastric stress ulcer in proximal duodenum post-severe burn. Caused by ↓ plasma volume → ischemia of gastric mucosa.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- The epidermis is avascular and its layers can be recalled with the mnemonic: Come, Let's Get Sun Burned.
- Neural crest cells are the origin for both melanocytes (in the stratum basale) and Merkel cells (sensory receptors).
- Langerhans cells, found in the stratum spinosum, are bone marrow-derived antigen-presenting cells.
- Pemphigus vulgaris (anti-desmosome) vs. Bullous pemphigoid (anti-hemidesmosome) are key autoimmune blistering diseases.
- Third-degree burns are painless because they destroy nerve endings.
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