Endocrine system
Sweat glands are connected to hair follicles.
The sympathetic division innervates the sweat glands and hair follicles.
The integumentary system contains sebaceous glands.
The sweat glands associated with hair are called apocrine glands. These glands produce a thicker, more odorous sweat that is released through hair follicles. They are primarily located in areas with dense hair follicles, such as the scalp, armpits, and groin.
hair, nails, skin, sweat and oil glands
The sympathetic division innervates the sweat glands and hair follicles.
Hair, nails, sweat glands, and sebaceous glands are categorized as appendages of the skin. They are part of the integumentary system, which serves various functions including protection, regulation of body temperature, and sensory perception. Hair and nails are primarily composed of keratin, while sweat and sebaceous glands are involved in the secretion of fluids that help maintain skin hydration and thermoregulation.
Sweat glands belong to the integumentary system, which is the body's system responsible for protecting the body from damage, such as dehydration and infection. Sweat glands help regulate body temperature by producing sweat, which cools the body through evaporation.
c.)sweat glands
THERE are glands on your head when you sweat you release it and the sweat goes onto your hair making it oily.
Lots of things. Basically, the integumentary system includes your skin (the epidermis and the dermis) and all of the glands that like in your skin (sebacous glands, apocrine glands, sweat glands, hair follicles).
Skin glands do not include hair follicles, as they are not classified as glands. Instead, skin glands typically refer to structures such as sweat glands (eccrine and apocrine) and sebaceous glands, which secrete sweat and oil, respectively. Hair follicles are responsible for hair growth and are associated with sebaceous glands but do not function as glands themselves.