No. Apocrine glands are not sebaceous glands. They are specialized sweat glands.
Apocrine glands which are sweat or sudoriferous glands not sebaceous
Sebaceous glands produce oil from the Dermis layer of the skin. The number of these glands in the skin is hard to calculate.
Batholin's Glands
sebaceous glands
Sebaceous glands
Holocrine gland is a type of exocrine gland that destroys its own cells in addition to its products. An example of this is the sebaceous gland.
No, sebaceous glands have ducts. They are exocrine glands.
No, sebaceous glands have ducts.
Sebaceous (oil) glands
Tarsal glands
Apocrine glands which are sweat or sudoriferous glands not sebaceous
there is no cure*. Sebaceous glands are a normal part of the body.
The sweat and sebaceous glands are in the dermis, not in the stratum corneum.
The glands of the skin called sebaceous glands produce an oily discharge.
Most sebaceous glands are on the skin and release oil. There are two types of modified sebaceous glands as well. Mammary glands produce milk, and ceruminous glands in the ear canal produce cerumen, or ear wax.
The integumentary system contains sebaceous glands.
Endocrine glands are glands which secrete oil, sweat, enzymes into ducts. Example: sweat glands, sebaceous glands, digestive gland, mucous. Correction! Exocrine glands are those which secrete to the outside (can still be inside the body- for example hormones involved in digestion) which have ducts and secrete oil- sebaceous glands. Endocrine glands secrete to hormones the "inside" and DO NOT have ducts, they are ductless.