how does epidermis get oxygen when there are no blood vessels?

phillybadboy

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how does epidermis get oXygen when there no blood vesSels running through it? also if you get a cut to the epidermis but no deeper than the epidermis would the scab turn dark or black or just stay yellow?
 

JPINFV

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The epidermis is comprised of dead cells. It doesn't need blood vessels. Ever scrape yourself and all you get is a white jaggedity line? There, you've cut your epidermis. If it bleeds, then you damaged the dermis.

Look up "stratified squamous keratinizing epithelium" (i.e. multiple layers of flat cells covered by layers of dead cells).
 
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mycrofft

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Says so right here on the box:"Diffusion from dermis"

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epidermis_(skin) The stratum corneum is dead cells, but some other cells are still alive.; there is not a defined barrier that says "this side is dermis, this side is epidermis", like the lining of an organ or whatnot, there is some graduation. Since simple chemical diffusion is more readily affected by pressure than circulation, this makes epidermal skin more prone to damage from blunt pressure; also, the skin, being adapted to not requiring lots of fresh circulation, does not die as fast as many other cells in the body, resisting such damage. Also why it dries out so fast sometimes.
 
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phillybadboy

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so some cells of the epidermis is alive? if so how does it recieve oxygen? i know it can get some nutrients by diffusion, but how does it get oxygen if red blood cells can't diffuse leave the blood vessels?
 

usafmedic45

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*rubs temple*

not_sure_if_serious.jpg
 

STXmedic

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so some cells of the epidermis is alive? if so how does it recieve oxygen? i know it can get some nutrients by diffusion, but how does it get oxygen if red blood cells can't diffuse leave the blood vessels?

The epidermis is comprised of dead cells. It doesn't need blood vessels.
...
 

mycrofft

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See, see:

Skinlayers.png

The lowest layer, the basal layer, continually produces cells which push their predecessors to the surface. The basal cells are very active, being thereby susceptible to radiation (including sunburn) and to carcinoma. If this process is disrupted through an autoimmune error,and the cell division goes haywire, you get some forms of psoriasis.
 

mycrofft

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See, see:

Skinlayers.png

The lowest layer, the basal layer, continually produces cells which push their predecessors to the surface. The basal cells are very active, being the susceptible to radiation (including sunburn) and to carcinoma. If this process is disrupted through an autoimmune error,and the cell division goes haywire, you get some forms of psoriasis.

Bazinga.jpeg
 
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phillybadboy

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mycroft, the layers requiring nutrients and oxygen are stratum basale,strtum spinosum,stratum granulosum, and stratum lucidum right? like the show too
 
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mycrofft

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I suppose. Basale for sure.

Again, Nature rarely draws distinct lines of structure and function except where one organ bumps up agains other stuff...otherwise it would be a region not an organ. If you doubt that, go in after a "simple lipoma" and find yourself three inches deep, blood filling your cavity, and the stupid thing is still leading you further down into the darkness.
 
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phillybadboy

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i guess my real question is how the cell groups without blood vessels recieve oxygen when red blood cells are too big to leak out of blood vessels, does hemoglobin or oxygen diffuse out?
 

Anjel

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i guess my real question is how the cell groups without blood vessels recieve oxygen when red blood cells are too big to leak out of blood vessels, does hemoglobin or oxygen diffuse out?

Capillaries are how they get oxygen. It allows 1cell through at a time.

I cant use.the.big words or give exact reasoning, but what veins.and arteries dont do, capillaries do.

The epidermis is dead cells, like hair and finger nails.

The dermis has capillaries.
 

usafmedic45

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i guess my real question is how the cell groups without blood vessels recieve oxygen when red blood cells are too big to leak out of blood vessels, does hemoglobin or oxygen diffuse out?
*facepalm* Yes there is something of a mild oxygen diffusion gradient. It's a very low degree of diffusion because skin does not require a large amount of oxygen at all which is why you can place a tourniquet on a limb for several hours to a day and have no significant complications (and even when they do it's normally the muscles that are the source of the problem and not the skin). No hemoglobin does not "leak out" because they would require the erythrocytes (red blood cells) to rupture. This is called hemolysis and is a bad thing if it occurs with any regularity.

I find your lack of basic knowledge disturbing.
 

STXmedic

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You forgot your disclaimer... ;)
 

usafmedic45

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Oops....sorry about that. LOL
 

usalsfyre

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Something not well covered in Basic class (or for that matter, some medic classes) is that O2 does not unload directly off of RBCs into the cell. It unloads off of RBCs into the plasma, and the into the cells. This is how diffusion occurs, and why PaO2, although it represents a tiny fraction of total oxygen carriage, is such an important number.
 

usafmedic45

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thank you, oxygen. diffuses .transported in plasma

Yes, but remember that the epidermis itself is dead. No need for oxygen if they're dead. Do you have a problem with comprehending what you are reading?
 

usafmedic45

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Something not well covered in Basic class (or for that matter, some medic classes) is that O2 does not unload directly off of RBCs into the cell. It unloads off of RBCs into the plasma, and the into the cells. This is how diffusion occurs, and

Actually, it doesn't "off-load into the plasma" of the blood. It offloads either into cells (JP or Veneficus can correct me if I am wrong but I believe it involves the cytochrome P450 enzyme or something like that....I hate cell biology). Now there is oxygen normally carried diffused in the plasma but it is a minority by a vast, vast percentage (see the bolded portion of the equation below for arterial oxygen concentration).

(Hgb x 1.36 x SaO2) + (0.0031 x PaO2)
 
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