Examples of Dermis in the following topics:
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- The blood vessels in the dermis provide nourishment and remove waste from its own cells and from the stratum basale of the epidermis.
- The dermis is tightly connected to the epidermis by a basement membrane.
- These protein fibers give the dermis its typical properties of strength, extensibility, and elasticity.
- Control of the blood supply to the dermis forms part of the body's thermoregulatory capacity.
- Corium—labeled at upper right—is an alternate term for dermis.
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- The dermis consists of a papillary and a reticular layer that serve to protect and cushion the body from stress and strain.
- Lying underneath the epidermis—the most superficial layer of our skin—is the dermis (sometimes called the corium).
- The dermis is a tough layer of skin.
- The dermis is composed of two layers.
- Beneath the dermis is the deepest layer of our skin.
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- Epidermal only wounds are typically less severe than those affecting the dermis and so stages of the wound healing response may be missed.
- As the epidermis is itself not vascularised—it is receiving blood from the dermis—a clotting and vasoconstrictive response is often not necessary.
- Since the dermis is intact, local fibroblasts are able to contribute to the formation of a new basement membrane, upon which the epidermis sits.
- Since the dermis and underlying tissue have not been damaged very little remodelling is required.
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- A tattoo is a form of body modification, made by inserting indelible ink into the dermis layer of the skin to change the pigment.
- A tattoo is a form of body modification, made by inserting indelible ink into the dermis layer of the skin to change the pigment.
- A tattoo is a form of body modification, made by inserting indelible ink into the dermis layer of the skin to change the pigment.
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- Most burns affect only the first two layers of the skin, the epidermis and dermis.
- In the latter system, burns are classified as first, second, third, or fourth degree burns based on the depth of injury to the dermis.
- Second degree burns extend into the superficial papillary dermis .
- Third degree burns extend through the entire dermis .
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- A deep wound involves the inner, deeper layers of the skin (dermis).
- Deep wounds that damage the dermis, or even the underlying muscle and fat, are more difficult to heal than shallow, epidermal-only wounds.
- However, with the removal of the dermis and its associated skin appendages, re-epithelialization can only occur from the wound edge, with no contribution from the dermal compartment.
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- The epidermis also helps the skin regulate body temperature through sweat pores that connect to underlying sweat glands in the dermis.
- The basement membrane: a thin sheet of fibers called the basement membrane, that seperates the dermis and epidermis.
- It controls the traffic of cells and molecules between the dermis and epidermis but also controls the release of cytokines and growth factors during wound healing for the skin.
- The dermis: the layer of skin beneath the epidermis that consists of connective tissue and cushions the body from stress and strain.
- The blood vessels in the dermis provide nourishment and waste removal from their own cells as well as for the epidermis.
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- Intrinsic and extrinsic aging describe cutaneous aging of the integumentary system primarily involving the dermis.
- While having some effects on the epidermis, such aging seems to primarily involve the dermis .
- Such an aging process may include qualitative and quantitative changes such as diminished or defective synthesis of collagen and elastin in the dermis.
- In younger skin, sun damage will heal faster since the cells in the epidermis have a faster turnover rate, while in the older population the skin becomes thinner and the epidermis turnover rate for cell repair is lower which may result in the dermis layer being damaged.
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- In order from most superficial to deepest they
are the epidermis, dermis, and subcutaneous tissue.
- Like
the dermis, the layer contains blood vessels and nerves for much the same
reasons.
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- Cleavage lines are topological lines drawn on a map of the human body and correspond to the orientation of collagen fibers in the dermis.
- They correspond to the natural orientation of collagen fibers in the dermis.