Skin Fascia 2
Share your inquiries now with community members Click Here
Sign up Now
Lessons List | 13 Lesson
Comments
Related Courses in Medical
Course Description
A fascia is a band or sheet of connective tissue, primarily collagen, beneath the skin that attaches to, stabilizes, encloses, and separates muscles and other internal organs. Fascia is classified by layer, as superficial fascia, deep fascia, and visceral or parietal fascia, or by its function and anatomical location.
Like ligaments, aponeuroses, and tendons, fascia is made up of fibrous connective tissue containing closely packed bundles of collagen fibers oriented in a wavy pattern parallel to the direction of pull. Fascia is consequently flexible and able to resist great unidirectional tension forces until the wavy pattern of fibers has been straightened out by the pulling force. These collagen fibers are produced by fibroblasts located within the fascia.
Fasciae are similar to ligaments and tendons as they have collagen as their major component. They differ in their location and function: ligaments join one bone to another bone, tendons join muscle to bone, and fasciae surround muscles and other structures.
Superficial fascia is the lowermost layer of the skin in nearly all of the regions of the body, that blends with the reticular dermis layer It is present on the face, over the upper portion of the sternocleidomastoid, at the nape of the neck, and overlying the breastbone It consists mainly of loose areolar, and fatty adipose connective tissue and is the layer that primarily determines the shape of a body.[medical citation needed] In addition to its subcutaneous presence, superficial fascia surrounds organs and glands, neurovascular bundles, and is found at many other locations where it fills otherwise unoccupied space. It serves as a storage medium of fat and water; as a passageway for lymph, nerve and blood vessels; and as a protective padding to cushion and insulate.
Superficial fascia is present, but does not contain fat, in the eyelid, ear, scrotum, penis and clitoris.
Due to its viscoelastic properties, superficial fascia can stretch to accommodate the deposition of adipose that accompanies both ordinary and prenatal weight gain. After pregnancy and weight loss, the superficial fascia slowly reverts to its original level of tension.
Trends
MS Excel
Excel Course Basic to Advanced
Learning English Speaking
English Language
Excel for data analytics and data visualization
Magento Formation Français
Graphs In python for beginners
Digital Marketing tools for beginners
SEO Google Digital Marketing
Business analysis techniques
Photoshop text masking effect methods
Python programming language
Web Design for Beginners
Communication Skills importance
Python in Hindi
Linux Operating system administration for beginners
Android development techniques for beginners
Adobe Illustrator Design Tips Essentials
English Grammar basics to Advanced
Mobile Apps from Scratch
Recent
TensorFlow fundamentals
Graphs In python for beginners
Figma UI design for beginners
Python web scraping fundamentals
Human Capital management strategies
MVC architecture fundamentals
AWS terraform techniques
Communication Skills importance
Microprocessor programming for beginners
Excel for data analytics and data visualization
Digital Marketing tools for beginners
Software Engineer Job fundamentals
Digital Marketing Job roles
Big Data Analytics skills for beginners
Business analysis techniques
Linux Operating system administration for beginners
Java Virtual machine security essentials
Google Cloud platform security essentials
Digital Marketing skills for beginners
Linux System Administration for beginners