The epidermis.
The basal layer of the closest layer to blood supply. You do not have blood supply to the outer layers of the skin.
Blood vessels. The epidermis is the outermost layer of the skin that does not contain blood vessels, which are needed to carry oxygen and nutrients to tissues, as well as facilitate the clotting process in case of injury.
The dermis is the layer of the skin that is vascular, not the epidermis. The dermis contains blood vessels, lymphatic vessels, hair follicles, and nerve endings.
Two components of the skin are the epidermis, the outermost layer that provides protection, and the dermis, the inner layer that contains hair follicles, sweat glands, and blood vessels.
Bones, ligaments, tendons, muscles, fat, blood vessels and on the outside is skin. Even a thin person has a small layer of fat under the skin.
The dermis, or lower layer of the skin, contains blood vessels and sensory nerve endings
The dermis, or lower layer of the skin, contains blood vessels and sensory nerve endings
The dermis, or lower layer of the skin, contains blood vessels and sensory nerve endings
papillary layer
The epidermis
Blood vessels in the dermis layer of the skin supply nutrients and oxygen to skin cells. These blood vessels bring in nutrients and oxygen from the rest of the body through the bloodstream.
The epidermis, or the outermost layer, contains no blood vessels.
The epidermis layer of the skin.
The dermal reticular layer; this layer is the location of a lot of structures such as the hair follicles and the blood vessels.
An abrasion is the medical term meaning scrape of the skin in which tiny blood vessels in the epidermis or outer layer of the skin break.
The dermis.
the subcutaneous layer (hypodermis)