Eccrine (sweat) glands.
the merocrine
merocrine gland
The type of exocrine gland you are referring to is a merocrine gland. Merocrine glands release their secretory products by exocytosis without losing any part of the cell. Examples include salivary glands and sweat glands.
This type of gland is called a merocrine gland. It releases secretions via exocytosis, where the secretory vesicles fuse with the cell membrane and release their contents, without any loss of cellular material. Examples include salivary glands and sweat glands.
The gland that secretes substances by exocytosis is called an exocrine gland. Exocrine glands release their secretions, such as enzymes or sweat, through ducts directly to the external environment or onto an epithelial surface.
the merocrine duct. and secretes in the "duct"
Sweat glands are usually either merocrine (most common) or apocrine (a specialized merocrine gland usually found around armpits that may be responsible for body odor and potentially human pheromones).
Merocrine Sweat Gland (Merocrine secretion)Make up majority of bodies sweat glands Most concentrated in palms and solesCoiled tubular gland secretes watery fluid Sweat composed mainly of hypotonic sodium chlorideReleased directly onto skin surfaceInnervatation Cholinergic fibers of sympathetic nervous systemStimulation of sweatingExcessive body heatFear
Merocrine Glands
Eccrine glands are the most abundant sweat glands and they are also over your body and function throughout your lifetime.
Merocrine Glands release its product and no part of the gland is lost or damaged.
No, as far as I can tell from definition, and as far as rupturing the cell, because definition of Merocrine is: "of or relating to a gland whose secretory cells remain undamaged during secretion".