Lacerations
APEX#
Laceration
More severe injuries damage and destroy more tissue , requiring greater replacement with scar tissue
A few examples of tissue could be epithelial, nerve, connective and muscle.
Stratified Squamous provides the best protection because it is the outer layer of our skin. Your epidermis is stratified squamous epithelium!
You can be describing a number of injuries from a contusion, sprain or strain to even a broken bone. Not all broken bones break the skin.
Cellulitis may be prevented by wearing appropriate protective equipment during work and sports to avoid skin injury, cleaning cuts and skin injuries with antiseptic soap, keeping wounds clean and protected
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Skin is extremely dense and solid. This is evidenced by how easily it reacts to injury, such as cuts, bruises, and burns.
squamous epithelial
Scars are made up of fibrous tissue, which is a result of skin repair. It is still live tissue, but it is not as good as the skin that was there before the injury.
Because stem cells presist in both epithelial and connective-tissue components of the skin even after injury
More severe injuries damage and destroy more tissue , requiring greater replacement with scar tissue
The increased availability of nutrients allows microorganisms to replicate. The skin and mucous membranes are body's first line of defense and are mostly impenetrable to microorganisms, unless broken or damaged by tissue injury.
Dermis is true skin, or a layer of body tissue.
This is a corrosive agent.
Do you mean, "contusion?" If so, it's an injury where the tissue is injured but the skin isn't broken (for example, a bruise.)
cuts and burns, previous surgery, and a genetic predisposition for skin to overreact to injury. Tension on the skin around the wound, foreign material in the wound, infection
It is a replacement tissue in an injured tissue, which is made up of connective tissue reguardless of whether the injury was in fact on the epithelium level. It is considered non-funtional because it does not carry out the function of the tissue that was replaced.