Sebaceous gland

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Sebaceous gland
HairFollicle.png
Schematic view of hair follicle & sebaceous gland.
Skin.jpg
Cross-section of all skin layers. A hair follicle with associated structures. (Sebaceous glands labeled at center left.)
Latin glandula sebacea
Gray's subject #234 1069
MeSH Sebaceous+glands

The sebaceous glands are microscopic glands in the skin which secrete an oily/waxy matter, called sebum, to lubricate the skin and hair of mammals.[1] In humans, they are found in greatest abundance on the face and scalp, though they are distributed throughout all skin sites except the palms and soles.[2] In the eyelids, meibomian sebaceous glands secrete sebum into tears. There are several related medical conditions, including: acne, sebaceous cysts, hyperplasia, sebaceous adenoma and sebaceous gland carcinoma (see section below: Pathology).

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[edit] Locations and morphology

A branched type of acinar gland, the sebaceous glands exist in humans throughout the skin except in the palms of the hands and soles of the feet.

Sebaceous glands can usually be found in hair-covered areas, where they are connected to hair follicles (see image at top). The glands deposit sebum on the hairs, and bring it to the skin surface along the hair shaft. The structure consisting of hair, hair follicle, arrector pili muscle, and sebaceous gland is known as a pilosebaceous unit.

Sebaceous glands are also found in non-haired areas (glabrous skin) of eyelids, nose, penis, labia minora, and nipples. Here, the sebum traverses ducts which terminate in sweat pores on the surface of the skin.

At the rim of the eyelids, meibomian glands are a specialized form of sebaceous gland. They secrete sebum into the tears coating the eye, to slow evaporation.

[edit] Sebum

Sebaceous glands secrete the oily, waxy substance called sebum (Latin, meaning fat or tallow) that is made of fat (lipids), wax, and the debris of dead fat-producing cells.[3] In the glands, sebum is produced within specialized cells and is released as these cells burst; sebaceous glands are thus classified as holocrine glands.

Sebum is odorless, but its bacterial breakdown can produce odors. Sebum is the cause of some people experiencing "oily" hair,[4] as in hot weather or if not washed for several days. Earwax is partly composed of sebum. Excessive sebum can be cleansed with detergent (as found in shampoo for oily hair), rather than just using bath soap.[4] Sebum secretion might increase after the first cleansing, so a secondary wash might be needed sooner (such as within half a day). Also, sebum will remain at lower temperatures, when rinsing hair with cold water, so showers should rinse in warm water (as between 37-38ºC, 98-100ºF).[5] Excess sebum has been linked to eating red meats, fried, oily or other foods, but studies are not conclusive.

[edit] Function

Sebum acts to protect and waterproof hair and skin,[6] and keeps them from becoming dry, brittle and cracked by dehydration. It can also inhibit the growth of some microorganisms (such as some bacteria) on the skin.[6]

[edit] Composition

The composition of sebum varies from species to species; in humans, the lipid content is as follows:[7]

Percent composition Substance
25% wax monoesters
41% triglycerides
16% free fatty acids
12% squalene

Sapienic acid is a sebum fatty acid that is unique to humans.

[edit] Changes during development

The sebaceous glands of a human fetus in utero secrete a substance called Vernix caseosa, a "waxy" or "cheesy" white substance coating the skin of newborns.

The activity of the sebaceous glands increases during puberty because of heightened levels of androgens. In males, sebaceous glands begin to appear predominantly on the penis, on the shaft and around the rim of the penile head during and after puberty. This is however normal, not to be confused with an STD. In females, they appear predominantly in the labia minora.

[edit] Pathology

Sebaceous glands are involved in skin problems such as acne and keratosis pilaris. In the skin pores, sebum and keratin can create a hyperkeratotic plug called a "microcomedone". The prescription drug isotretinoin significantly reduces the amount of sebum produced by the sebaceous glands, and is used to treat acne.

The extreme use (up to 10 times doctor-prescribed amounts) of anabolic steroids by bodybuilders, for muscle gain can cause acne. The sebaceous gland is stimulated due to some steroids conversion into dihydrotestosterone. This may cause serious acne on the face, neck, chest, back and shoulders.

A blocked sebaceous gland can result in a sebaceous cyst.

A condition involving enlarged sebaceous glands is known as sebaceous hyperplasia.

Sebaceous gland carcinoma is a rare and aggressive form of cancer involving the sebaceous glands; sebaceous adenoma is a more benign neoplasm of the sebaceous glands.

Sebum can also build up around body piercings.[8]

[edit] Importance to other animals

Demodex mite

Certain species of Demodex mites feed on sebum and are commonly found in the sebaceous glands of mammals, including those of humans.

The preputial glands of mice and rats are large modified sebaceous glands that produce pheromones.

[edit] Additional images

[edit] References

  1. ^ Dellmann's textbook of veterinary histology (405 pages), Jo Ann Coers Eurell, Brian L. Frappier, 2006, p.29, weblink: Books-Google-RTOC.
  2. ^ James, William; Berger, Timothy; Elston, Dirk (2005) Andrews' Diseases of the Skin: Clinical Dermatology (10th ed.). Saunders. Page 7. ISBN 0721629210.
  3. ^ "Exercise 15: Hair", VT.edu, 2008, webpage: Vetmed-lab15.
  4. ^ a b "Hair Care: An Illustrated Dermatologic Handbook", Zoe Diana Draelos, Zoe Kececioglu Draelos, 2005, p.26, web: Books-Google-5QC: oily hair & detergents.
  5. ^ "Beijing 101 Hair Consultants - Q&A", Beijing101Hair.com, 2009, web: B101-qna: Rinsing hair "with cold water after that will cause the sebum to stay on the scalp. Hence, set water temperature for your shower between 37ºC to 38ºC."
  6. ^ a b "Natural Skin Care for Oily Skin - Wellsphere", Wellsphere.com, 2009, webpage: WS-skin-sebum.
  7. ^ Jeffrey B. Cheng and David W. Russell. Mammalian Wax Biosynthesis II: Expression Cloning of Wax Synthase cDNAs Encoding a Member of the Acyltransferase Enzyme Family, J Biol Chem. 2004 Sep 3;279(36):37798-37807. PMID 15220349 Fulltext
  8. ^ Playe, Stephen J (July 2002). "Infectious Complications of Body Art: Infection is reported in about 1% of tattoos and in up to 45% of piercings, depending on the technique employed, body location, and after care". Emergency Medicine News 24 (7): 10–13. doi:10.1097/01.EEM.0000334232.52899.06. ISSN 1552-3624. http://www.em-news.com/pt/re/emmednews/abstract.00132981-200207000-00007.htm;jsessionid=J3QHjVQl5vQqyyYhpdNxppJvvBPpkX7jNgj7f6HKFwsk6JhqCtp9!928310026!181195629!8091!-1. 

[edit] External links