The dermis is abundantly supplied with sensory nerves. Every hair follicle reacts to stimulus--whether a draft of air blowing on your arm, or feeling your sweater/clothing. The sensory nerve pathways form a complex and complete route for stimulus and response, almost instantaneously unless impaired.
because the dermis has blood vessels.
The Papillary Layer which is a part of the Dermis
The papillary dermis is the most superficial layer of the dermis. Deep to it is the reticular dermis.
Also known as the subcutaneous layer or the sub-dermis. It is called Submucosa.
The two layers of the dermis are the papillary dermis, which is the upper layer closest to the epidermis and contains blood vessels and sensory receptors, and the reticular dermis, which is the deeper layer made up of dense connective tissue, collagen fibers, and sweat glands.
the answers on Wiki are abundantly clear.
No. Dermis is skin.
That is the correct spelling of the adverb "abundantly" (in good supply, or completely).
Dermis is a noun.
The term for the superficial portion of the dermis is the papillary dermis.
Dermis can not produce the sweat. Sweat is produced by the sweat glands. They lie in the dermis.
No, the dermis doesn't contain smooth muscle tissue. However, it does contain components like blood vessels, nerves, hair follicles, and sweat glands that are essential for sensory perception and regulation of body temperature. Nerve endings in the dermis play a key role in transmitting sensations like touch, pressure, and pain.