Main content
Health and medicine
Course: Health and medicine > Unit 1
Lesson 11: Integumentary system introduction- Meet the skin! (Overview)
- What is skin? (Epidermis)
- What lies beneath the epidermis? (Dermis and Hypodermis)
- Where do our nails and hair come from?
- What's in sweat? (Holocrine, Apocrine, Merocrine Glands)
- LeBron Asks: Why does sweating cool you down?
- Overview of Sensation and Meissner's Corpuscle
- Pacinian's Corpuscle and Merkel's Disk
- Ruffini's Ending and Hair Follicle Receptor
- Pain and temperature
- Thermoregulation mechanisms
© 2023 Khan AcademyTerms of usePrivacy PolicyCookie Notice
Where do our nails and hair come from?
This video explores the structure and growth of nails and hair, integral parts of the integumentary system. It delves into the role of the epidermis and dermis in nail and hair formation, the function of keratin, and the intriguing role of the arrector pili muscle in creating goosebumps. Created by Raja Narayan.
Want to join the conversation?
- In a previous video, the arrector pilli muscle was drawn in the reticular dermus... and in this video, it was drawn in the papillary dermus? Which is it?(47 votes)
- He said atthat the hair follicle originates in the reticular dermis. He drew it correctly in the reticular dermis. 4:41(0 votes)
- Why are there different hair colors?(7 votes)
- The color of hair depends on the amount and type of melanin present. Melanin is the name of the pigment that gives your hair color.
Melanin is divided into two types called eumelanin and pheomelanin. The more eumelanin you have, the darker you hair will be. The less eumelanin you have, the lighter you hair (usually).
Eumelanin is also divided into two types: brown eumelanin, and black eumelanin. If you have more black eumelanin, your hair is darker, and if you have low amounts of both, you hair is blonde.
Red hair is caused by large amounts of pheomelanin in your hair.
The color of your hair is dependent on the amount of melanin present.(15 votes)
- Are there short hairs that don't extend to the outside world?(5 votes)
- AtRaja said that finger nails grow 4 times faster than toe nails do. My question is why do finger nails grow faster that toe nails? 2:35(5 votes)
- One thing could be is that we use our hands/fingers MUCH more than our feet. This causes increased blood flow, which could increase the rate of growth.(4 votes)
- Hi! In the video just before this it says the errector pilli muscle grows in the reticular dermis so I am confused. Here he says "its important to say this grows in the papillary dermis"
Please clarify!(6 votes) - since our fingernails are only made of the epidermis layer, can they feel pain?(2 votes)
- You are correct, fingernails and hair are epidermis and we do not have sensory nerve endings in the epidermis. Therefore, we can cut fingernails and hair without experiencing pain. The nerve endings are in the dermis, as are the origins of hair follicles and nail beds. As a result of nerve endings in the dermis directly contacting these areas, we feel a sensation when a fly lands on a hair and we feel the vibration when tapping our nails on the counter.(8 votes)
- Another fun fact about Polar bear fur is that it is hollow, which is why polar bears are so buoyant when they swim.(5 votes)
- Isn't there a reason for our hair standing on end? Don't we get warm also?(3 votes)
- Yes, but like he said, it's more of a "vestigial" function. Unlike the polar bear in his reference, we couldn't rely on only our hair to keep us warm in the winter.(4 votes)
- atit is said that the nail is part of the epidermis, and having the same keratinocyte, that is having keratin that give the nail it's "rigidity". 1:53
What I don't get is :
Having the same cells, how come the "results" is not the same :
- Skin, which is flexible
- Nail, which is much more rigid
Is it a question of concerntration of keratin in the cell ? Or other factor ?
thanks(4 votes) - why do fingernails grow four times faster than toenails?(3 votes)
- Because we use our fingers more than our toes, we adapted to have fingernails grow faster than toenails, so that the more important fingers would always have a protective nail.(3 votes)
Video transcript
- So to build on our knowledge
of the integumentary system, we understand that integument is made up of layers of our skin, as well as things that
are called appendages. I'll write that up here, appendages. An appendage is kind of a loaded term. There are a lot of things that fall under this classification. Your nail, for instance, is an appendage. So, how does your nail even grow? Well, why don't we just blow
up this interface right there, to get a better sense of
how our nail is structured. So, let me just draw
your finger right here, and it's going along this way, and then I'm going to draw
without the nail for right now, so you can sort of see how it grows, and this is kind of where
your finger is coming off. The first thing to realize
is that this part right here, which is called the nail root, is attached to your epidermis. So, I'll color it blue, because that's how we've
been labeling our epidermis so far right here, and
I'll even write it out. So, this is your epidermis. That's your topmost layer of skin that we talked about in a separate video. And this is attached right to
your nail root right there. So, that's your nail root. And the interesting thing about this interaction point right here is that when you have cells
grow in your epidermis, remember that you have cells ascend from your deeper layers up to the top, but here where the nail root is, you'll also have cells
that grow out that way. So, you're going to have
cells that come from the stratum basale, if
you remember that term for the bottommost
layer of your epidermis, and you'll have some of the keratinocytes grow, die, and then eventually
extend into the nail, and what that means is that your nail is essentially part of the epidermis. So, I'll draw your nail
right there in blue, because it's made up of thick keratin. So, keratin from your keratinocytes or the cells that made up your epidermis, and this keratin is just packed into a whole bunch of dead cells. So, the dead cells that sit at the very top of your epidermis hold or are packed with keratin actually. They are packed with keratin, and they move to the top of the epidermis, and then they kind of shift this way. And recall the keratin is the reason why your skin is so tough,
and, in fact, in the nail the keratin is what
keeps the nail so stiff, and this is true for your
fingernails and your toenails. The difference is your fingernails actually grow about four times
faster than your toenails, and I guess just for reference, because we're going to be talking about it in our other appendages, remember that below your epidermis you're going to have your dermis here, and below the dermis
there's the hypodermis or the subcutaneous fat or tissue. Great. So, that's how our nail
is structured and grows. Let's talk about another appendage that might be back here, for instance. So, hair. Let's say we're talking about this backhanded hirsute right here, which just means somebody that's got a lot of hair on the back of their hand, and we'll do the same
trick and blow this up to get a better look at what's going on, where our hair grows. So, the big difference
between our hair and our nails is that our hair grows from the dermis. So, I'll draw our skin right here, sort of the same orientation
we had down here, and recall that our epidermis
is our topmost layer of skin. I'll make it small here,
because it's not going to be most of the business we're talking about, and then below it we've
got our dermis right here, and I'll label that,
because it's important. That's our dermis. This is where we're
going to be talking about most of our stuff right now. And then below the dermis, remember there's our subcutaneous
fat or the hypodermis. And so, the thing about
the dermis to recall is that there are two main parts to it, and I'll kind of just draw it like that. There's the papillary dermis, so I'll write dermis papillary, which is the top layer of the dermis, and then there's the reticular
layer, and if you recall, the papillary layer is the thinner looser connective tissue layer, and the reticular layer
is the thicker, denser connective tissue layer. So, the way our hair is set up is that there's a follicle
that originates here. It's this bulb that sits
in your reticular dermis. So, I'll label that off here. This is your hair follicle. You may have heard of that term before. Your hair follicle sits
in the reticular dermis, and then from this follicle
you've got this hair. We call it the shaft of your hair, that extends upward and out, and realize that just like
the skin and with the nail, the hair itself has a whole bunch of flattened or stratified
squamous epithelial cells that are filled with keratin. And so, the keratin is inside of the cells that are stacked up here in
the hair that I'm coloring in, and it also is surrounded by keratin. So, there's your hair, and actually your hair grows
at about a rate of 0.5 inches or 1.25 centimeters a month. So, let me label this right here. This is our hair shaft that
you can see protruding through your reticular dermis,
into the papillary dermis, into the epidermis, and even to the external
environment right here. And the other thing I need to draw now, aside from the hair
follicle and the shaft, is this band of muscle that I'm going to be
putting in right here. It's important that I
mention that it sits here in the papillary dermis, so it's in this top layer
of the dermis right here. This band of muscle, I'll
write it all the way here, is called the arrector, with
an A, arrector pili muscle. The arrector pili muscle. And if you'll recall your types of muscle, this is smooth muscle. This is not under our control. We can't cause our arrector
pili muscle to contract. It's something that happens involuntarily, and when this muscle contracts, there are two things that happen. One, you'll have your skin
sort of bunch up together, and so you'll have what's
commonly referred to as goose bumps, and you can see that here, because if this band of muscle
gets shorter or skinnier, you'll just bunch your skin together, and you'll have little
lumps that come up here. So, you'll have a lump that shows up, and that's your goose bump. And the other thing that'll happen is that it'll make your hair stand up. It'll make your hair stand up. So, I'll just write hair stand, because I don't have as much space here, and your hair will stand up, and this occurs either from strong emotion or exposure to a cold environment. So, one thing you might be asking is, why do we even have this
arrector pili muscle? What's the point of having
our hair stand on end? And actually this is
something that's more useful in animals than it is for us. So, imagine if we're
talking about a polar bear, and I'll give it my best shot
at drawing a paw right here, to represent a little polar bear. But we've got this polar bear right here, and this guy's in the cold. So, poor guy's out in the cold, okay. And when a cold breeze hits this guy's little paw right here, what's going to happen is that
the hair on this polar bear is going to stand on end like that, just like I talked about in
the case of a human being. Now, the hair in a polar
bear is a lot longer than the hair in a human being, and by making this furry
coat stand up like this, what happens is you create
a warm insulating layer. The layer of air that's embedded
within the hair right here is significantly warmer than
the external cold environment. And so, what that does
is that allows the warmth to stay within the paw and also extend to the rest
of the polar bear's body, so the polar bear stays warm. We don't have that much hair, and so the arrector pili
muscle, to some extent, is actually a vestigial structure, vestigial meaning currently useless or not functional anymore. But it's still a pretty
interesting reminder of what other animals would
do to deal with the cold and how we sort of try to manage without their abundance of hair.