QUESTION IMAGE
Question
- your 90-year-old grandmother had a stroke and has been in a nursing home for about three months. on your last visit, you noticed a red, blistered area on the back of her leg. name your grandmother’s skin condition, its stage of development, and the proper treatment.
- list at least one way in which the integumentary system interacts with the following body systems: skeletal, muscular, nervous, endocrine, circulatory, lymphatic, respiratory, digestive, urinary, and reproductive.
browse the net
for additional information and interactive exercises, search using the following key words and topics:
- integumentary system, layers of the skin
- hair, nails, sudoriferous glands, sweat glands
- effects of aging on the skin
- diseases of the skin and appendages
- environmental effects on the skin
- skin cancer
- effects of sunlight
- burns, types and treatment
Response
Question 9
Brief Explanations
- Skin Condition: Pressure ulcer (stage II). Prolonged immobility (nursing home, post - stroke) causes pressure on skin, leading to redness, blisters (stage II has partial - thickness skin loss with blisters).
- Stage of Development: Stage II pressure ulcer (partial - thickness skin loss involving epidermis/dermis, presents as blisters or shallow ulcers).
- Treatment: Relieve pressure (e.g., repositioning, pressure - relieving devices), clean wound with saline, apply moist wound dressings, monitor for infection, ensure proper nutrition/hydration.
Brief Explanations
- Skeletal System: Skin (integumentary) protects bones from injury/infection; vitamin D synthesis in skin helps with calcium absorption for bone health.
- Muscular System: Skin protects muscles; sweat from skin helps cool muscles during exertion.
- Nervous System: Skin has sensory receptors (nervous system receives touch/pain/temperature signals from skin).
- Endocrine System: Skin synthesizes vitamin D (acts as a hormone - precursor, endocrine system - related as it affects calcium metabolism).
- Circulatory System: Skin has blood vessels (circulatory system delivers nutrients/oxygen to skin, removes waste; skin helps regulate blood pressure via vasoconstriction/vasodilation).
- Lymphatic System: Skin - associated lymphoid tissue (part of lymphatic system) helps fight skin - related infections.
- Respiratory System: Skin helps regulate body temperature (like respiratory system regulates gas exchange, both maintain homeostasis); skin and respiratory system both contribute to water loss (skin via sweat, respiratory via exhalation).
- Digestive System: Vitamin D from skin aids in calcium absorption in digestive tract; skin protects digestive organs (abdomen skin).
- Urinary System: Skin and kidneys (urinary system) both regulate fluid/electrolyte balance (skin via sweat, kidneys via urine).
- Reproductive System: Skin protects reproductive organs; during pregnancy, skin stretches (hormonal changes from reproductive system affect skin).
Snap & solve any problem in the app
Get step-by-step solutions on Sovi AI
Photo-based solutions with guided steps
Explore more problems and detailed explanations
- Skin Condition: Pressure Ulcer (Stage II)
- Stage of Development: Stage II (partial - thickness skin loss, blistered area)
- Treatment: Reposition to relieve pressure, clean wound with saline, apply moist dressings, monitor for infection, ensure good nutrition.