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30 July 2002 |
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The
skin as a sense and communication organ
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Among the major tasks of the skin is its function as a sense organ and its function
to communicate with the environment. Mechanic and thermal stimuli as well as pain
stimuli are perceived by a series of receptors which render the skin into a sense
organ. Through reddening, paling and other manifestations of the vegetative nerve
fibres the skin becomes an organ of communication transmitted by the vegetative
nervous system, and thus a communication organ.
The sensors or receptors of the skin comprise the Vater-Pacini lamellar corpuscules,
Meissner's touch corpuscules, intraepithelial nerve endings, corpuscules of Ruffini
as well as Krause endbulbs (see Figure, from left to right).
The Vater-Pacini corpuscules are oval bodies. They are the largest lamellar corpuscules
among the nervous end organs. Due to their high sensibility the corpuscules are
able to perceive the smallest vibrations. They are pressure and tension receptors
as well as vibration and shock receptors. The Pacinian receptors are furthermore
excited by deformation, pressure or decompression, if pressure persists, they
turn off. They are up to 4 millimeters in length and have an average size of approximately
2 millimeters. Their structure is onion-like. On average, there are 20-40 layered
lamellae which are separated by interstitial fluid space.
Meissner's touch corpuscules or touch discs are receptors for touch. They are
found below the epidermis in the hairless skin of the papilla and are long oval,
cone-like touch corpuscules in the corium. They consist of obliquely piled up
sensory cells and helical markless nervous fibres.
Intraepithelial nerve endings are sensitive nerve fibres in the skin which release
perceptions of warmth, cold, pain, touch and pressure.
The corpuscules of Ruffini are found in the corium and in the subcutis, are made
up of extended nets of markless nerve fibres which are 0.25 - 1.5 mm in length
and are thought to be receptors for expansion.
Krause end bulbs are bulb-like mechanoreceptors with tangled, winding axons surrounded
by a capsule. They mostly occur in the mucous membrane of the mouth and the tongue.
Source: Leonhardt, H., Histologie, Zytologie und Mikroanatomie des Menschen, Volume
3, Thieme 1990; Roche Lexikon Medizin, Ed. Urban & Schwarzenberg, 3. Auflage
1993.