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Dermis Collection (page 3)

The dermis, a fascinating layer of our skin, plays a crucial role in protecting and maintaining our body

Background imageDermis Collection: Human skin anatomy, artwork F008 / 0198

Human skin anatomy, artwork F008 / 0198
Human skin anatomy, computer artwork

Background imageDermis Collection: Human skin anatomy, artwork F008 / 0200

Human skin anatomy, artwork F008 / 0200
Human skin anatomy, computer artwork

Background imageDermis Collection: Human skin anatomy, artwork F008 / 0377

Human skin anatomy, artwork F008 / 0377
Human skin anatomy, computer artwork

Background imageDermis Collection: Human skin anatomy, artwork F008 / 0299

Human skin anatomy, artwork F008 / 0299
Human skin anatomy, computer artwork

Background imageDermis Collection: Human skin anatomy, artwork F008 / 0367

Human skin anatomy, artwork F008 / 0367
Human skin anatomy, computer artwork

Background imageDermis Collection: Human skin anatomy, artwork F008 / 1099

Human skin anatomy, artwork F008 / 1099
Human skin anatomy, computer artwork

Background imageDermis Collection: Human skin anatomy, artwork F008 / 0305

Human skin anatomy, artwork F008 / 0305
Human skin anatomy, computer artwork

Background imageDermis Collection: Human skin anatomy, artwork F008 / 0203

Human skin anatomy, artwork F008 / 0203
Human skin anatomy, computer artwork

Background imageDermis Collection: Human skin anatomy, artwork F008 / 1084

Human skin anatomy, artwork F008 / 1084
Human skin anatomy, computer artwork

Background imageDermis Collection: Human skin anatomy, artwork F008 / 1093

Human skin anatomy, artwork F008 / 1093
Human skin anatomy, computer artwork

Background imageDermis Collection: Human skin section, light micrograph

Human skin section, light micrograph
Human skin. Light micrograph of a section through healthy human skin. The outer surface of the skin is at top. The uppermost surface is the epidermis

Background imageDermis Collection: Human skin section, light micrograph P710 / 0472

Human skin section, light micrograph P710 / 0472
Human skin. Light micrograph of a section through healthy human skin. The outer surface of the skin is at top. The uppermost surface is the epidermis

Background imageDermis Collection: Human skin anatomy, artwork

Human skin anatomy, artwork
Human skin anatomy, computer artwork

Background imageDermis Collection: Hair follicle, SEM C014 / 0382

Hair follicle, SEM C014 / 0382
Hair follicle. Coloured scanning electron micrograph (SEM) of a section through a hair shaft and follicle (round structures at centre)

Background imageDermis Collection: Human skin, artwork F006 / 2317

Human skin, artwork F006 / 2317
Human skin. Computer artwork of a cross-section through human skin

Background imageDermis Collection: Human skin, artwork F006 / 2316

Human skin, artwork F006 / 2316
Human skin. Computer artwork of a cross-section through human skin

Background imageDermis Collection: Human skin, artwork F006 / 2315

Human skin, artwork F006 / 2315
Human skin. Computer artwork of a cross-section through human skin

Background imageDermis Collection: Human skin, artwork F006 / 2314

Human skin, artwork F006 / 2314
Human skin. Computer artwork of a cross-section through human skin

Background imageDermis Collection: Hair follicle, SEM C014 / 0383

Hair follicle, SEM C014 / 0383
Hair follicle. Coloured scanning electron micrograph (SEM) of a section through a hair shaft and follicle (round structures at centre)

Background imageDermis Collection: Hairy scalp skin, light micrograph

Hairy scalp skin, light micrograph
Hairy scalp skin. Light micrograph of a section through healthy skin from a human scalp, showing the numerous hair follicles. The scalp is an example of hairy skin

Background imageDermis Collection: Skin structure, artwork C016 / 7541

Skin structure, artwork C016 / 7541
Skin structure. Computer artwork showing the different layers and structure of human skin. The upper layer (centre) is the epidermis, with the dermis below

Background imageDermis Collection: Finger skin, SEM

Finger skin, SEM
Finger skin. Coloured scanning electron micrograph (SEM) of a section through skin from a human finger, showing the characteristic dermal ridges (lower left, and right) that make up the fingerprint

Background imageDermis Collection: Skin anatomy, artwork

Skin anatomy, artwork
Skin anatomy. Artwork of a section through human skin, showing the flattening of skin cells as they rise to the dead keratinised surface layer (top) from the living layer below (the dermis)

Background imageDermis Collection: Hair follicle, illustration C018 / 0795

Hair follicle, illustration C018 / 0795
Hair follicle, illustration. Hair is formed from the protein keratin. It is a dead tissue that is pushed up by growth from the bulb at the base of the follicle

Background imageDermis Collection: Wart structure, artwork

Wart structure, artwork
Wart structure. Artwork of a section through human skin, showing the subsurface blood vessels (red) supplying a wart. Warts are harmless

Background imageDermis Collection: Skin surface, SEM C017 / 8494

Skin surface, SEM C017 / 8494
Skin surface. Coloured scanning electron micrograph (SEM) of vapour entrapments/sweat globules on the surface of human skin

Background imageDermis Collection: Skin surface, SEM C017 / 8493

Skin surface, SEM C017 / 8493
Skin surface. Coloured scanning electron micrograph (SEM) of vapour entrapments/sweat globules on the surface of human skin

Background imageDermis Collection: Mouse tail, light micrograph

Mouse tail, light micrograph
Mouse tail. Light micrograph of a cross-section through a mouses tail. At centre is the tail vein, which contains red blood cells. A smaller vein (purple squiggle) is seen at top centre left

Background imageDermis Collection: Human skin, polarised light micrograph

Human skin, polarised light micrograph
Human skin. Polarised light micrograph of a section through human skin showing hair follicles (black). The top layer of the skin

Background imageDermis Collection: Sweat gland in skin

Sweat gland in skin. Light micrograph of a section through the dermis of the skin showing a sweat gland. The gland is composed of a secretory portion (upper left)

Background imageDermis Collection: Coloured SEM of a section through skin

Coloured SEM of a section through skin
Skin. Coloured scanning electron micrograph of a section through human skin. The uppermost skin layer is the epidermis (orange & yellow)

Background imageDermis Collection: Hair follicles, SEM

Hair follicles, SEM
Hair follicles. Coloured scanning electron micrograph (SEM) of a section through freeze- fractured hair follicles in the skin

Background imageDermis Collection: Skin layers, light micrograph

Skin layers, light micrograph
Skin layers. Coloured light micrograph of a section through human skin layers. The top layer is the stratum corneum (flaky, orange), a cornified layer of the epidermis that is composed of flattened

Background imageDermis Collection: Coloured SEM of a section through skin layers

Coloured SEM of a section through skin layers
Skin. Coloured scanning electron micrograph (SEM) of a section through human skin. At top is the stratum corneum (green) of the epidermis, a cornified layer composed of flattened

Background imageDermis Collection: Skin and hair follicles

Skin and hair follicles. Artwork taken from Govard Bidloos Anatomia Humani Corporis (Anatomy of the Human Body), published 1685

Background imageDermis Collection: Coloured SEM of blood vessels in the skin

Coloured SEM of blood vessels in the skin
Skin blood vessels. Coloured scanning electron micrograph (SEM) of two small blood vessels (far left and upper right) in the dermis of the skin

Background imageDermis Collection: Second-degree burn, artwork

Second-degree burn, artwork
Second-degree burn, cut-away artwork. A second-degree burn damages the top layer of skin (epidermis, dark pink) and the underlying tissue (dermis, pink)

Background imageDermis Collection: Third-degree burn, artwork

Third-degree burn, artwork
Third-degree burn, cut-away artwork. A third-degree burn is a severe burn that damages the top layer of skin (epidermis, dark pink), the underlying tissue (dermis)

Background imageDermis Collection: Elastic cartilage, SEM

Elastic cartilage, SEM
Elastic cartilage. Coloured scanning electron micrograph (SEM) of a section through elastic cartilage (central horizontal strip) from a pinna (external ear)

Background imageDermis Collection: Psoriasis, light micrograph

Psoriasis, light micrograph
Psoriasis. Light micrograph of a section through a psoriasis pustule. Psoriasis is a chronic skin disease causing inflammation and scaly lesions

Background imageDermis Collection: Scaly skin

Scaly skin
Psoriasis. Artwork comparing two sections through human skin: healthy skin (left) and skin affected by psoriasis (right). Psoriasis is the presence of scaly lesions on the skin

Background imageDermis Collection: Skin mole, light micrograph

Skin mole, light micrograph

Background imageDermis Collection: Human skin, light micrograph

Human skin, light micrograph
Human skin. Light micrograph of a cross-section through a sample of skin from a human finger. Across top are layers of stratified squamous epithelium forming the outer skin layers

Background imageDermis Collection: Ageing skin, artwork

Ageing skin, artwork
Ageing skin. Computer artwork of sections through human skin, showing its appearance as it ages (from left to right). Elastin (red) and collagen (blue) in the skins dermis (pink) break down

Background imageDermis Collection: Snake dermis fibres, SEM

Snake dermis fibres, SEM
Snake dermis fibres, coloured scanning electron micrograph (SEM). The dermis is the layer of living skin below the outer epidermis and the scales of a snake

Background imageDermis Collection: Skin tissue, SEM

Skin tissue, SEM
Skin tissue. Coloured scanning electron micrograph (SEM) of a freeze-fracture through human skin tissue. The fracture plane (lower frame) has revealed the pseudo-stratified epithelium (below surface)

Background imageDermis Collection: Scalp tissue, light micrograph

Scalp tissue, light micrograph
Scalp tissue. Polarised light micrograph of a section through the human scalp. This section shows oblique and transverse sections through hair shafts (yellow-orange)

Background imageDermis Collection: Skin tissue, light micrograph

Skin tissue, light micrograph
Skin tissue. Light micrograph of a transverse section through human skin. The skin is made up of an outer epidermis (pale purple, across top) with hair follicles (deep purple)



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The dermis, a fascinating layer of our skin, plays a crucial role in protecting and maintaining our body. From skin disorders to intricate artwork, the dermis offers us an array of wonders to explore. In a SEM image of a section through human skin, we witness the complexity and beauty that lies beneath the surface. The layers of They can revealed, showcasing their unique functions and structures. Another illustration captures heat trapped by erect hairs in a cross-section of human skin. This phenomenon highlights how our body adapts to environmental changes and regulates temperature effectively. A colored SEM showcases blood vessels within the dermis, emphasizing its vital role in nourishing our skin cells. These intricate networks ensure proper circulation and contribute to overall health. Moving deeper into this microscopic world, we encounter various skin conditions depicted in cross-sections. A blackhead reveals clogged pores while papules showcase inflamed spots on the surface. Pustules demonstrate infected areas with pus accumulation, while whiteheads depict blocked follicles under the skin's surface. Delving further into anatomy, we explore how different layers interact harmoniously within the dermis. Each layer serves distinct purposes – from epidermis protection to collagen production – creating a resilient shield against external factors. Histopathology and pathophysiology come into play when examining diabetic foot ulcers' impact on the dermal layer. Understanding these processes helps medical professionals provide effective treatments for patients suffering from such conditions. Whether it is appreciating its artistic qualities or unraveling its complexities during medical research, exploring the wonders of the dermis unveils both aesthetic marvels and critical insights into human health.