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Eccrine sweat glands are found in virtually all skin, with the highest density in the palms of the hands, and soles of the feet, and on the head, but much less on the torso and the extremities. In other mammals, they are relatively sparse, being found mainly on hairless areas such as foot pads.
Eccrine sweat glands: skin: coiled tubular 11 Esophageal glands: esophagus: mucous racemose 12 Exocrine pancreas: pancreas: serous tubulo-acinar 13 Gastric chief cell, Wasmann's glands stomach: serous 14 Glomus coccygeum, coccygeal gland, Luschka's gland or gangliona coccyx, near the tip 15 Goblet cells: digestive tract, respiratory tract ...
Eccrine glands open directly onto the surface of the skin, while apocrine glands open into hair follicles. Eccrine glands are the predominant sweat gland in the human body with numbers totaling up to 4 million. [3] They are located within the reticular dermal layer of the skin and distributed across nearly the entire surface of the body with ...
Merocrine is the most common manner of secretion. The gland releases its product and no part of the gland is lost or damaged (compare holocrine and apocrine). The term eccrine is specifically used to designate merocrine secretions from sweat glands (eccrine sweat glands), [1] although the term merocrine is often used interchangeably. [2] [3]
They are larger than eccrine glands, but smaller than apocrine glands. [38] Their secretory portion has a narrow portion similar to secretory coils in eccrine glands as well as a wide section reminiscent of apocrine glands. [39] Apoeccrine glands, found in the armpits and perianal region, have ducts opening onto the skin surface. [40]
The eccrine sweat glands are distributed over much of the body and are responsible for secreting the watery, brackish sweat most often triggered by excessive body temperature. Apocrine sweat glands are restricted to the armpits and a few other areas of the body and produce an odorless, oily, opaque secretion which then gains its characteristic ...
An apocrine sweat gland (/ ˈ æ p ə k r ə n,-ˌ k r aɪ n,-ˌ k r iː n /; from Greek apo 'away' and krinein 'to separate') [5] [6] is composed of a coiled secretory portion located at the junction of the dermis and subcutaneous fat, from which a straight portion inserts and secretes into the infundibular portion of the hair follicle. [7]
Eccrine sweat glands under the skin secrete sweat (a fluid containing mostly water with some dissolved ions), which travels up the sweat duct, through the sweat pore and onto the surface of the skin. This causes heat loss via evaporative cooling ; however, a lot of essential water is lost.