Ch. 7.3 Integumentary System
Ch. 7.3 Integumentary System
Ch. 7.3 Integumentary System
Ch. 7.3 Integumentary System
Ch. 7.3 Integumentary System
100

What is Albino

Person with an absence of color pigments.

100

What is Alopecia

Baldness, a loss of hair on the scalp.

100

What is Constrict

Blood vessels getting smaller due to heat.

100

What is Crusts

Areas of dried pus and blood, commonly called scabs.


100

What is Cyanosis

Bluish discoloration of the skin caused by insufficient oxygen. It can be associated with heart, lung, and circulatory diseases or disorders.

200

What is Cyst

A closed sac with a distinct membrane that develops abnormally in a body structure, usually filled with a semisolid material.

200

What is Dermis

Also called corium, or “true skin”. This layer has a framework of elastic connective tissue and contains blood vessels, lymph vessels, nerves, involuntary muscle, sweat and oil glands, and hair follicles.

200

What is Dilate

Blood vessels getting larger due to heat.

200

What is Epidermis

The outermost layer of the skin, made of five smaller layers but no blood vessels or nerve cells.

200

Erythema

A reddish color of the skin that can be caused by either burns or a congestion of blood in the vessels.

300

What is Hypodermis

The innermost layer of skin, also called Subcutaneous fascia. It is made of elastic and fibrous connective tissue and adipose (fatty) tissue and connects the skin to underlying muscles.

300

What is Integumentary system

Skin. Covers more than 3000 square inches of surface area and accounts for about 15 percent of body weight.

300

What is Jaundice

A yellow discoloration of the skin, can indicate bile in the blood as a result of liver or gallbladder disease. Can also occur in conjunction with certain diseases that involve the destruction of red blood cells.

300

What is Macules

Flat spots on the skin, such as freckles.

300

What is Melanin

Brownish black pigment, produced in the epidermis by specialized cells called melanocytes.

400

What is Papules

Firm, raised areas such as pimples and the eruptions seen in some stages of chickenpox and syphilis.

400

What is Pustules

Pus-filled sacs such as those seen in acne, or pimples.

400

What is Sebaceous glands

Oil glands that usually open onto hair follicles. They produce sebum, an oil that keeps the skin and hair from getting dry and brittle.

400

What is Subcutaneous

The innermost layer of skin, also called Hypodermis. It is made of elastic and fibrous connective tissue and adipose (fatty) tissue and connects the skin to underlying muscles.

400

What is Sudoriferous glands

Coiled tubes that extend through the dermis and open on the surface of the skin at pores.

500

What is Ulcer

A deep loss of skin surface that may extend into the dermis, may cause periodic bleeding and the formation of scars.

500

What is Vesicles

Blisters, or fluid-filled sacs, such as those seen in chickenpox.

500

What is Wheals

Itchy, elevated areas with an irregular shape, examples include hives and insect bites.