Systema integumentarium Index Integumentum invertebratorum | Integumentum Vertebratorum | Morbi et vulnera | Notae | Tabula navigationis

Partes corporisOrgana


systemaorganorumepidermidedermateqvehypodermatepilispennissquamispinnisunguibusevaporationemcalorem internum moderatdoloremsensusvitaminumDsystema organorumrespirantgasiumliquore interstitialiinvertebratorumcellularumArthropodacuticulaproteinisexoskeletonhypodermatisVertebratorumepidermidedermateceratinofibrisvasis sanguineisnervisquetextus adiposus







Cutis elephantis est durum integumentum.


Systema integumentarium sive integumentum est systema organorum quod corpus a damnis externis protegit et constat in epidermide dermateqve (et hypodermate) et eius accessionibus,[1][2] velut pilis, pennis, squamis, pinnis, et unguibus. Integumentum variis muneribus fungitur: evaporationem vitat, aquam prohibet aut substantiarum meatui favet, textus internos a periculis externis protegit, calorem internum moderat, dolorem ceterosque sensus affert, solis radiationem in vitaminum D convertit.


Integumentum est maximum corporis systema organorum. In Homine sapienti haec systema constat ex circa 16 centesimis ponderis corporis, et circa 1.5–2m2 superficiei tegit.[3] Invertebrata minora quae loca umida habitant per integumentum externum respirant; modus iste gasium pemutandorum, quo gasia diffunduntur tantum introrsum extrorsumque liquore interstitiali, permutatio integumentaria vocatur.




Index





  • 1 Integumentum invertebratorum


  • 2 Integumentum Vertebratorum


  • 3 Morbi et vulnera


  • 4 Notae




Integumentum invertebratorum |


Nonnullorum invertebratorum integumentum uno cellularum stratu constat. Alia, velut Arthropoda, epidermidem habent, in exodermidem et endodermidem divisam, super quam cuticula (e proteinis facta) invenitur, quae exoskeleton format. Sub dermate
hypodermatis fibrae repperiuntur.



Integumentum Vertebratorum |


Vertebratorum integumentum cutis vocatur, quae ex epidermide (superius) et dermate (inferius) constat. Epidermis, cutis extrema pars, ceratino dura est. Derma autem intima pars, fibris et vasis sanguineis nervisque farta, sub quem stratum textus adiposus est.





Morbi et vulnera |


Morbi et vulnera in cute humana sunt:


  • Acne vulgaris

  • Albinismus

  • Cancer cutis

  • Cutis adusta

  • Eruptio

  • Herpes

  • Inflammatio

  • Pustula

  • Pes athletae


Notae |



  1. Formula:MeshName


  2. Marieb, Elaine; Katja Hoehn (2007). Human Anatomy & Physiology (7a ed.). Pearson Benjamin Cummings. p. 142 


  3. Martini & Nath, Fundamentals of Anatomy & Physiology, ed. 8a (Pearson Education, 2009), p. 158.









Popular posts from this blog

acmart: Multiple authors: all with same affiliation, one author an additional affiliationHow to Write Names of Multiple Authors with Shared Affiliation in ACM 2017 Template?Multiple authors with different primary affiliation, but same additional affiliationSame affiliation for all authors without extra packagesIOS-Book-Article.cls: one author with multiple affiliationacmart: Shared Author AffiliationMultiple authors with different primary affiliation, but same additional affiliationAuthor affiliation with only 1 authorAdding Multiple Authors with Different Affiliation in LaTeX ArticleLaTeX: Multiple authors stays on same lineHow to Label Multiple Authors with Same DescriptionHow to make two authors use the same affiliationTwo authors with same affiliation on finished front page

How to write “ä” and other umlauts and accented letters in bibliography?Accents in BibTeXSorting references with special characters alphabeticallyUse ae ligature in bibliographyEastern European nameInverted circumflex in BibTexBibTex, non-ascii initials and nameptr fproblems with accent in LatexHow to add a Ø to my bibliography from Jabref?References without accentsTroubles when trying to cite St“omer-Verlet in ”title" field of a bib entryComprehensive list of accented charactersHow to type the letter “i” with two dots (diaeresis) in math mode?Problem with glossary text and accented lettersSpecial character in bibliographyAccented letters, Unicode and LaTeX accentsHow to stop natbib from modifying bibliography styleCitation of a paper with non-standard characters by BibtexWrite accented characters to file using writeHow to group the bibliography alphabetically, if some surnames start with “accented” characters?How can I automatically capitalize significant words in my bibliography?

How to force a table into page width?How to make table spanning textwidthMaking table width fit into text widthTable with tabular, column type p grabbing available spaceMaking widths of tables equal to width of textblocklatex tabular width the same as the textwidthMake tabular span textwidth exactlySet width of table to be the whole line or a given portion of itIs the tabu package obsolete?What is the difference between tabular, tabular* and tabularx environments?How can i set the width of a table?Making table width fit into text widthTabular and grid typesettingMake table use page widthTable exceeds page widthtable width automatically to page widthHow to shrink table to page widthForce table column to be zero widthTable width exceeds the page widthTable extending beyond the page widthforce longtable to text width