Normal Cutaneous Anatomy and the Aging Process Including Aesthetic Assessment

Normal Cutaneous Anatomy and the Aging Process Including Aesthetic Assessment

Module Summary

The skin varies in terms of thickness and composition across the body. The skin is divided into an epidermis and dermis. They are connected by a complex basement membrane zone. The main cell of the epidermis is the keratinocyte. The mitotically active basal layer generates keratinocytes that migrate and differentiate superiorly. They are shed as anucleate keratinocytes of the stratum corneum in about 28 days. The main component of the dermis is collagen. Collagen provides structural integrity to the skin. UV radiation disorganizes dermal collagen and elastin and contributes to photoaging. Photoaging is histologically distinguished from chronological aging. The Glogau scale I-IV classifies photoaging. 

Module Learning Objectives 
  1. Explain the structure and components of the epidermis and dermis.
  2. Recognize how the epidermis and dermis change with aging.
  3. Review the difference between photoaging and chronological aging of the skin.
  4. Classify skin using the Glogau and Fitzpatrick scales. 

 

Epidermis

General characteristics

  • Outermost layer of the skin: keratinizing, stratified, squamous epithelium
  • Total epidermal turn over time from the basal layer to the stratum corneum is approximately 30 days
  • Thickness is approximately 0.075 mm to 0.15 mm

Cell types

  • Keratinocytes
    • 80% of epidermal cells
    • Originate in the basal layer
    • Contain keratin for structure and support
  • Melanocytes
    • Found in skin, inner ear, choroid, and iris of the eye
    • Neural crest derived, pigment-producing, dendritic cells with clear cytoplasm 
    • Only in stratum basale
    • Produce melanin to protect the mitotically active basal keratinocytes from ultraviolet radiation induced DNA damage
      • Melanin production
        • Melanin is packaged in melanosomes in the melanocyte
        • Melanosomes are transported through dendritic projections from the melanocytes to adjacent keratinocytes by phagocytosis
    • Number of melanocytes does not differ between races; the number and size of melanosomes is greater in people with darker skin
  • Langerhans cells
    • Bone marrow-derived, antigen-processing and antigen-presenting cells
    • Found mainly in the spinous epidermal layer but also in the normal dermis
    • Characterized by dendritic processes (similar to melanocytes)
    • Identified on electron microscopy by intracytoplasmic, small, tennis racket-shaped structures called Birbeck granules 
  • Merkel cells 
    • Slow-reacting type I mechanoreceptors of neural crest origin involved with touch sensation
    • Found in basal layer of palms, soles, oral and genital mucosa, nailbeds, and the follicular infundibulum
    • Contain granules of neurotransmitter-like substances
    • Identified by immunohistochemical identification of cytokeratin-20 (CK-20)
    • Origin of Merkel cell carcinoma 

Layers of epidermis

  • Stratum corneum (cornified superficial layer)
    • Terminal differentiation of keratinocytes into anucleate, flattened keratinocytes surrounded by extracellular lipid matrix
    • Highly variable in thickness
    • Thickest on the palms and soles; thinnest on the eyelids and genitalia
    • “Barrier activity” providing mechanical protection and preventing water loss
  • Stratum lucida 
    • Eosinophilic acellular layer seen beneath the stratum corneum on acral skin (palms, soles)
  • Stratum granulosum (granular layer)
    • Larger and flatter than cells in the stratum spinosum 
    • 1-4 cells thick
    • Deeply basophilic keratohyalin granules which contain proteins important for the cornification and barrier function of the stratum corneum
  • Stratum spinosum (spinous layer)
    • Several cells thick
    • Polygonal cells with abundant eosinophilic cytoplasm 
    • Contain lamellar granules which contain lipids important for integrity of the epidermis
    • Named for small, spiny intercellular desmosomal attachments seen under light microscopy
  • Stratum basale (basal layer)
    • Deepest layer
    • Single mitotically active layer of cuboidal to columnar-shaped basophilic keratinocytes that attach to the basement membrane zone and give rise to the more superficial epidermal layers 
    • Attached to underlying basement membrane zone by hemidesmosomes 
    • Melanocytes are interspersed between basal cells

Epidermal appendages

  • Hair follicle
    • 3 regions
      • Infundibulum – from skin surface to opening of the sebaceous duct into the follicle
      • Isthmus – between the opening of the sebaceous duct into the follicle and the bulge
      • Inferior most portion – inferior to the bulge and includes the hair bulb
    • Internal organization of hair follicle is conceptualized as series of distinct concentric layers. From peripheral to inner:
      • Outer root sheath
        • Contiguous with the epidermis and lined by the dermal epidermal junction
        • Follicular epithelium in the dermis of the skin is additional source of germinative cells for re-epithelialization of partial thickness wounds
      • Inner root sheath
        • Three layers: Henley’s layer, Huxley’s layer, cuticle
      • Hair shaft
        • Three layers: cuticle, cortex that forms most of the hair shaft, variable central medulla
    • Hair follicles undergo independent cycles of growth, involution, and rest
      • Anagen (growth) – keratinocytes in the bulb proliferate and produce growing hair 
      • Catagen (involution) – keratinocytes stop proliferating and the inferior portion of hair follicle involutes
      • Telogen (rest) – inferior portion of the hair follicle is lost and hair is typically shed from the follicle
  • Sebaceous glands 
    • Connect to the hair follicle by a squamous epithelial duct 
    • Secrete sebum through the duct into the follicle and onto the surface of the skin 
      • Controlled by androgens and associated with acne
    • Enlarge and become active during puberty
    • Found everywhere on the body except the palms and soles
    • Most abundant on face and scalp
    • Not always associated with a hair follicle (Fordyce’s spots on the lip and meibomian glands on the eyelids)
  • Eccrine sweat glands
    • Found everywhere on the skin except the mucus membranes
    • Eccrine sweat unit = coiled secretory gland + duct 
      • Opens directly on the skin 
    • Innervated by cholinergic nerve fibers which are stimulated by thermal, mental, and gustatory stimuli
  • Apocrine sweat glands 
    • Axilla, areola, perineum, eyelids (Moll’s glands), and external auditory canal (ceruminous glands)
    • Become functional just before puberty
    • Respond to emotive stimuli by adrenergic innervation
    • Odorless secretions
    • Apocrine sweat unit = secretory gland + duct
      • Opens into hair follicle

 

References

  1. Bichakjian CK, Johnson TM. Anatomy of the skin. In: Baker SR (ed) Local Flaps in Facial Reconstruction, 2nd ed, Philadelphia, Mosby, 2007, p 3-13. 
  2. Leithauser LA, Collar RM, Ingraffea A. Structure and function of the skin. In: Papel ID, Frodel JL, Holt GR, et al. (eds) Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, 4th ed, New York, Thieme, 2016, p 1-5. 

 

Dermal-Epidermal Junction (basement membrane zone)
  • The epidermis attaches to the dermis by a basement membrane (BM)
    • On light microscopy, thin pink band that stains positive with periodic acid-Schiff (PAS) stain
    • Primarily type IV collagen
    • Keratin filaments within basal keratinocytes condense and attach to the inferior keratinocyte membrane = hemidesmosome
    • Two layers of basement membrane 
      • Superficial lamina lucida
      • Deeper lamina densa 
  • Mechanical support to the epidermis to protect from shearing forces
  • Semi-penetrable barrier 

 

References

  1. Bichakjian CK, Johnson TM. Anatomy of the skin. In: Baker SR (ed) Local Flaps in Facial Reconstruction, 2nd ed, Philadelphia, Mosby, 2007, p 3-13. 
  2. Leithauser LA, Collar RM, Ingraffea A. Structure and function of the skin. In: Papel ID, Frodel JL, Holt GR, et al. (eds) Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, 4th ed, New York, Thieme, 2016, p 1-5. 

 

Dermis

General characteristics

  • Extracellular dermal matrix: collagen, elastin, ground substance
  • Gives the skin pliability, elasticity, and tensile strength
  • Regional variation in thickness: <1mm on eyelid, 1.5mm in temple, 2.5mm in scalp, and >4mm on the back

Layers of the dermis

  • Papillary dermis – superficial, thin
  • Reticular dermis – deep, thick

Structural components of the dermis 

  • Collagen – principle component 
    • Synthesized by dermal fibroblasts
    • Tensile strength and elasticity 
    • 85% is type I collagen – thick fibers, dense bundles, predominantly found in reticular dermis
    • 10% is type III collagen – thin fibers, small/loose bundles, predominantly found in papillary dermis
    • <5% is type V collagen
    • Type IV and VII collagen are predominately in the basement membrane zone.
    • Degraded by matrix metalloproteinase (MMPs) (e.g. collagenase) and replaced by new fibers
  • Elastic tissue
    • Composed of a protein elastin, microfibrillar matrix with fibrillin, a glycoprotein, and other components 
    • Synthesized by fibroblasts
    • In papillary dermis – thin fibers, perpendicular to the skin
    • In reticular dermis – thick fibers, parallel to the skin
  • Ground substance 
    • Proteoglycans, glycosaminoglycans, filamentous glycoproteins
      • Hyaluronic acid is important glycosaminoglycan 
    • Synthesized by fibroblasts
    • Plays a role in skin hydration/water reservoir and preserves the tensile elasticity of compressed skin by redistributing the pressure forces

Cellular components of the dermis

  • Fibroblasts 
    • Synthesize collagen, elastin, and ground substance
  • Phagocytic cells: monocytes, macrophages, dendrocytes
  • Mast cells 

Vasculature 

  • Two vascular plexuses connected by communicating vessels
    • Superficial vascular plexus
      • At the superficial aspect of the superficial reticular dermis 
    • Deep vascular plexus 
      • At the junction of the dermis and subcutaneous fat 
    • Lymphatic system similar to vascular plexuses 

Nerves

  • Myelinated and nonmyelinated free nerve endings
    • Temperature, pain, itch
  • Meissner’s corpuscles
    • Fine touch 
  • Pacinian corpuscles
    • Deep pressure and vibration
  • Efferent nerves
    • Innervate blood vessels and appendageal structures to regulate function

 

References

  1. Bichakjian CK, Johnson TM. Anatomy of the skin. In: Baker SR (ed) Local Flaps in Facial Reconstruction, 2nd ed, Philadelphia, Mosby, 2007, p 3-13. 
  2. Leithauser LA, Collar RM, Ingraffea A. Structure and function of the skin. In: Papel ID, Frodel JL, Holt GR, et al. (eds) Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, 4th ed, New York, Thieme, 2016, p 1-5. 

 

 

Histologic Aging Changes of the Skin

Aging changes of the epidermis  

  • Thins in the 5th and 6th decade 
  • Decreased tyrosinase activity and melanocyte density
  • Fewer Langerhans cells 
  • Enlargement of sebaceous glands resulting in yellow lesions = sebaceous hyperplasia

Aging changes of the dermal-epidermal junction 

  • Flattening of the dermal-epidermal junction

Aging changes of the dermis 

  • Thickens until 4th or 5th decade then thins  
  • Fewer fibroblasts 
  • Elastic fiber damage, especially in the papillary dermis

Chronological aging of the skin versus photoaging of the skin

  • Chronological aging
    • Disorganized collagen
    • Thin epidermis
    • Flat dermal-epidermal junction
    • Decreased fibroblasts and collagen
  • Photoaging (UV exposure)
    • UV radiation produces MMPs in epidermis and dermis 
      • Fragmentation and degradation of elastin and collagen fibers, mostly in the papillary dermis
    • Thickened, basket-woven stratum corneum
    • Atrophic epidermis with atypia
    • Irregular dispersion of melanin 
    • Increased or decreased thickness of the epidermis
    • Accumulation of elastin fibrils below the dermal-epidermal junction (solar elastosis)
    • Increased vascularity
    • Hypercellular dermis

 

References

  1. Bichakjian CK, Johnson TM. Anatomy of the skin. In: Baker SR (ed) Local Flaps in Facial Reconstruction, 2nd ed, Philadelphia, Mosby, 2007, p 3-13. 
  2. Leithauser LA, Collar RM, Ingraffea A. Structure and function of the skin. In: Papel ID, Frodel JL, Holt GR, et al. (eds) Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, 4th ed, New York, Thieme, 2016, p 1-5. 
  3. Airan LE, Hruza G. Current lasers in skin resurfacing. Facial Plast Surg Clin N Am. 2005;13:127-139.
  4. Clark CP. Office-based skin care and superficial peels: the scientific rationale. Plast Reconstr Surg. 1999;104(3):854-864. 

 

Aging Assessment of the Skin
  • Examination findings of photoaging
    • Epidermal and dermal dyspigmentation (“sun spots”)
    • Dermal telangiectasias
    • Rough surface texture
    • Fine rhytids, crepe-like changes 
    • Deep rhytids 
    • Pallor 
    • Cream-yellow discoloration 
    • Loose, sagging, and folded skin 
  • Epidermal pathology associated with aging
    • Actinic keratoses
    • Lentigines 
    • Seborrheic keratoses 

 

Glogau classification of facial photoaging

Type Photoaging  Age Makeup
I Mild pigmentary changes
No keratosis
Minimal wrinkles
20s-30s Minimal or no makeup
II Early senile lentigines visible
Keratosis palpable but not visible
Parallel smiles lines beginning to appear
Late 30s-40s Usually wears some foundation
III Obvious dyschromia
Telangiectasias
Visible keratoses
Wrinkles even when not moving
50s + Wears heavy foundation
IV Yellow-gray skin color 
Prior skin malignancies
Wrinkled throughout
No normal skin
60s-70s Can’t wear makeup – cracks or cakes

 

 

 

Fitzpatrick skin types

Skin Type Skin Color Tanning Response 
I White Always burns, never tans
II White Usually burns, tans with difficulty
III White Sometimes mild burn, tan average
IV Brown Rarely burns, tans with ease
V Dark Brown Vary rarely burns, tans very easily
VI Black No burn, tan very easily

 

References

  1. Bichakjian CK, Johnson TM. Anatomy of the skin. In: Baker SR (ed) Local Flaps in Facial Reconstruction, 2nd ed, Philadelphia, Mosby, 2007, p 3-13. 
  2. Weiss RA1, McDaniel DH, Geronemus RG, Weiss MA, Beasley KL, Munavalli GM, Bellew SG. (2005). Clinical experience with light-emitting diode (LED) photomodulation. Dermatol Surg, 31(9 Pt2):1199-1205.
  3. Airan LE, Hruza G. Current lasers in skin resurfacing. Facial Plast Surg Clin N Am. 2005;13:127-139.
  4. Glogau RG, Matarasso SL. Chemical face peeling: patient and peeling agent selection. Facial Plast Surg. 1995;11(1):1-8
Case Studies
  1. A 65 year-old woman from Florida presents with concerns about facial aging. 
  • She is noted on examination to have signs of photoaging: dyspigmentation, telangiectasias, rough texture and wrinkles at rest. 
  • You describe her as a Glogau III.
  1. A 50 year-old woman presents with an interest in a chemical peel.  She states that she always burns and never tans.  She has blond hair, fair skin, and blue eyes.  Her family is Scandinavian. 
  • This patient is a Fitzpatrick Type I. 
  1. A 30 year-old Cuban woman presents to your office with patches of pale skin on her face.  She states that her mother has the same progressive condition.  
  • Vitiligo is caused by a lack of melanocytes or properly functioning melanocytes.  Albinism is a skin condition where melanocytes are present but lack tyrosinase and therefore tyrosine cannot transform to melanin.

 

Review questions

  1. What are the layers of the epidermis? 
  2. What is the difference between vitiligo and albinism? 
  3. Describe the basement membrane zone.
  4. What is the role of MMPs in aging of the skin? 
  5. What is the difference between photoaging and chronological aging?

 

References

Case 1

  1. Weiss RA, McDaniel DH, Geronemus RG, Weiss MA, Beasley KL, Munavalli GM, Bellew SG. (2005). Clinical experience with light-emitting diode (LED) photomodulation. Dermatol Surg, 31(9 Pt2):1199-1205.
  2. Airan LE, Hruza G. Current lasers in skin resurfacing. Facial Plast Surg Clin N Am. 2005;13:127-139.
  3. Glogau RG, Matarasso SL. Chemical face peeling: patient and peeling agent selection. Facial Plast Surg. 1995;11(1):1-8.

 

Case 2

  1. Glogau RG, Matarasso SL. Chemical face peeling: patient and peeling agent selection. Facial Plast Surg. 1995;11(1):1-8.

 

Case 3

  1. Bichakjian CK, Johnson TM. Anatomy of the skin. In: Baker SR (ed) Local Flaps in Facial Reconstruction, 2nd ed, Philadelphia, Mosby, 2007, p 3-13.