The Anatomy of the SkinIn order to correctly understand the nature of the morbid changes that go on in the skin, and to comprehend correctly how and where these changes begin, it is necessary to have an accurate knowledge of the healthy skin in its different parts. The surface of the dermis is not developed into a distinct and separable basement membrane, as is so often the case in a mucous membrane, but in the most superficial portions of the dermis the connective tissue shows little or no fibrillation and consists of a homogeneous matrix, in which are imbedded connective tissue corpuscles and extremely fine elastic fibres. This superficial portion of the dermis, which is especially well developed in the papillae, serves accordingly the purposes of a basement membrane, and sharply defines the dermis from the overlying epidermis. At a very little distance from the epidermis, fibrillation makes its appearance, the bundles of fibrillae interlacing in a network which, very closely set in the outer, more superficial layers, becomes more and more open in the inner, deeper parts. The connective tissue of the dermis thus passes insensibly into the subcutaneous connective tissue, in which thick interwoven bundles of fibrillae, bearing in transverse section a certain resemblance to sections of tendon bundles, form a tough open network, the larger spaces of which are frequently occupied by masses of fat cells of the subcutaneous adipose tissues. Elastic fibres are very abundant in the dermis proper, being very fine immediately beneath the epidermis and becoming coarser in the deeper parts; they are present also, though to a less extent, in the subcutaneous connective tissue. The skin, as a whole, is a very elastic structure. |
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