4th. The affections of the chorion itself, all marked with a chronic character, on account of the kind of vitality and structure of this portion of the skin, occasion also sympathies which have the same chronic character, but of which we know but little.
The organic contractility cannot be put sympathetically in action in the skin, as it does not exist there.
Though we have spoken in general of the vital properties of the skin, they are far from being uniform or at the same degree in all the regions.
1st. There is no doubt that the animal sensibility of the soles of the feet and the palms of the hands is greater than that of the other parts. Many persons are so sensible in the hypochondriac region, that the least tickling there produces convulsions. The anterior and lateral part of the trunk is always more sensible than the region of the back.
2d. The organic properties do not vary less. The extreme susceptibility of the face to receive the blood, is a proof of it, as I have said. It is generally known that some parts are more proper than others for the application of blisters. Observe on this subject that the places where the animal sensibility predominates, are not the same as those in which the organic is in the greatest proportion. The soles of the feet and the palms of the hands hold the first rank in relation to one, and the face in relation to the other.
In diseases we also see these varieties. Who does not know that some particular parts of the skin are especially the seat of some particular cutaneous affections, and that when these affections are general, they always predominate in certain places. We ought not to be astonished at these varieties, since we have seen that the dermoid texture is infinitely variable as it respects its papillæ, its reticular body, its chorion, &c.
The life of the cutaneous system is essentially intermittent in relation to animal sensibility. All the senses exhibit this phenomenon. Thus when the eye has for a long time gazed upon objects, the ear heard sounds, the nose received odours, and the mouth tastes, these different organs become unfit to receive new sensations; they become fatigued, and require rest to regain their forces. It is the same with regard to feeling and the touch; wearied by the impression of surrounding bodies, the skin requires an intermission of action to regain excitability adapted to new impressions. We know that a short time before sleep, external bodies produce but an obscure sensation upon it, and that their contact has no effect in this state, in which animals seem to lose half of their existence. The more powerfully the cutaneous sensibility has been excited, the more profound is sleep; hence why all painful exercises, great frictions, &c. are always followed by a deep sleep. Yet this sense can sometimes exert itself, while the others sleep; pinch the leg of a man asleep; he draws it away without waking, and has afterwards no remembrance of the sensation. Thus somnambulists often hear sounds, even eat, &c.; for, as I have said elsewhere, sleep may affect but a very limited part of animal life, as it may the whole.
Under the relation of organic sensibility, the life of the cutaneous system is essentially continuous. Thus the functions over which this property presides have a character opposite to the preceding. The insensible transpiration takes place continually, though there may be some periods in which it is more active than in others. The oily fluid is incessantly carried away and renewed; we might even say sometimes that it is when the animalsensibility is interrupted, that the organic is in the greatest exercise.
It is especially in diseases that they have made this observation, which is besides generally applicable to organic life. All this life is as active and even more so during the night than during the day. Most of the diseases that attack the functions which belong to it, are marked by an increase of activity during the night. All fevers which particularly affect the circulation have their exacerbation towards night. In diseases of the heart, the patients are more oppressed at this period, &c. In phthisis which affects respiration, it is in the night especially that there is hectic fever, sweats, &c. Pneumonia and pleurisy, exhibit frequent exacerbations towards night. In glandular diseases, either acute or chronic we make the same observation. It would be necessary to refer to almost all the affections which alter especially an organic function, in order to omit nothing upon this point. On the contrary, observe hemiplegia, epilepsy, convulsions, various paralysies of the different organs of sense, most mental alienations, apoplexy and other affections which exert their influence more particularly upon animal life, they have not, so often at least, their exacerbations towards evening and during the night, no doubt because in the natural state, this life is in the habit of becoming drowsy and not of being raised like the other which seems to imprint this character upon its alterations. Other causes no doubt have an influence upon this phenomenon; but I believe this to be a real one.
The sex has an influence upon the cutaneous life. In general the animal portion of this life is more raised in women, in whom every thing that belongs to the sensations is proportionally more marked than in man, who predominates by the power of his locomotive muscles. Theeffects of tickling are infinitely more powerful in females. All the arts which require nicety and delicacy of touch are advantageously cultivated by women. The peculiar texture of the chorion, a texture generally more delicate, has no doubt an influence upon this phenomenon. As to the organic portion of the cutaneous life, the difference is not very great. Man appears to be superior in this respect; he generally sweats more; his skin is more unctuous, which proves a greater secretion.
The temperament peculiar to each individual is not a less real cause of differences in the skin. We know that the colour, roughness and pliability of this organ vary according as individuals are sanguineous, phlegmatic, &c. that these external attributes are even a character of the temperaments. Varieties of structure no doubt coincide with these. Is it then astonishing that the animal sensibility differs so much, that the touch itself should be delicate in some and dull in others, that some should be very ticklish, whilst others are not so at all, &c.? Ought we to be astonished if the organic sensibility, which is very variable, should determine, according to the individuals, many varieties in the phenomena over which it presides; if in some, it allows much blood to go to the face, and if it repels this fluid in others who are always pale; if some men sweat much, whilst others have the skin almost always dry; if the cutaneous oil varies in quantity; if there are some skins much disposed to eruptions, either acute or chronic, to pimples of different natures, and if others are almost always free from them, even when the individuals expose themselves to the contagion of these diseases; if superficial wounds, of the same extent and made by the same instrument, are sometimes quicker and sometimes slower in healing; if the cure of cutaneous diseases is also very variable in its periods, &c. &c.?
In the first periods after conception, the skin is but a kind of glutinous covering, which seems to be gradually condensed, forms a transparent envelope, through which we see in part the subjacent organs, the vessels especially, and which is torn by the least jar. This state continues for a month and a half or two months. The consistence constantly increasing, soon gives to the skin an appearance more nearly like that which it has in infants after birth. Its delicacy is extreme at this period. It has not one quarter the thickness of that of the adult. The moment in which it begins to lose its mucous state appears to be that in which the fibres of the chorion are formed. Until then the cellular texture and the vessels especially composed it, and as the first is abundantly filled with juices during the early periods, it is not astonishing that it should then give way under the least pressure. But when the fibres are formed, the cellular texture diminishes on the one hand, and is concentrated in the spaces that are developed, and on the other the dermoid fibres, more dense than its layers, increase the resistance.
We do not see upon the external surface of the skin of the fœtus most of the wrinkles of which we have spoken above. Those of the face in particular are not seen; the kind of immobility, in which the facial muscles are, is evidently the reason of it. The forehead, the eyelids,the edges of the lips, &c. are smooth. Besides, the abundance of fat which then distends the integuments of the cheeks, prevents every species of fold there. As the hands and the feet are found in part bent at their articulations, by the attitude of the fœtus, different wrinkles are already formed about these articulations, principally on the hand, where however they appear less in proportion than afterwards. The curved, papillary lines are not very evident on the foot and the hand, even when the epidermis is removed.
The internal surface of the skin is remarkable for the slight adhesion of the subjacent cellular texture, the cells of which filled with fatty particles are removed with great ease, by scraping this surface with the edge of a knife. We see then there the spaces already well formed, and as distinct in proportion as afterwards. By pursuing their dissection from within outwards, we insensibly lose sight of them towards the external surface where the skin is condensed.
More blood enters the skin of the fœtus, than at any other period of life. It is easy to observe this in small animals taken alive from the womb of their mother; for in the fœtuses that are dead at birth, or born prematurely, the cause which destroys life, increasing or diminishing in the last moments the quantity of cutaneous blood, prevents us from drawing any conclusion as to the ordinary state by an inspection of them. The nerves are, as in all the other parts, more evident; but the papillæ, though sensible, as I have said, have not a proportionable increase.
The animal sensibility is not in exercise in the skin of the fœtus, or at least it is very obscure there. This is owing to the absence of the causes of excitement. These are the surrounding heat, the waters of the amnios and the parietes of the womb, which can furnish materials for sensations; but as these causes are always uniform, and have no varieties, the fœtus can have but a very feebleperception, because acuteness of sensation requires change of stimuli. We know that heat long continued at the same degree becomes insensible, that a long continuance in a bath takes away almost entirely the sensation of the water, because habit is every thing as it respects sensation; nothing but what is new affects us powerfully.
Is the organic sensibility of the skin in activity in the fœtus? does it preside over the alternate exhalation and absorption of the waters of the amnios? This is not the common opinion, it is not even a probable one; but this question is far from being settled in so precise a manner as many other points of physiology.
Besides, it cannot be doubted that there is a copious secretion of an unctuous and viscid fluid, which covers the whole body of the fœtus, but which is more abundant in some places than others, as behind the ears, in the groin, the axilla, &c. either because it is secreted there in greater quantity, or accumulated on account of the arrangement of the parts. Accoucheurs have it wiped off after birth, and the females of animals remove it by the repeated application of their tongues to the surface of the body. This fluid appears to be to the skin of the fœtus what the oily fluid is to that of the adult; it defends this organ from the impression of the waters of the amnios. If the sebaceous glands exist, it would appear that they furnish it, for it is certainly from a different source from the sweat. When care has not been taken to remove this covering, it irritates the skin, and may produce excoriations, and a species of erysipelas. The air cannot remove it by solution. Nothing similar oozes from the skin of the infant after birth. Is it because the black blood alone is capable of furnishing the materials of this substance?
At the moment of birth the dermis experiences a sudden revolution. Hitherto entered only by black blood,it is at the time the fœtus is born, more or less coloured by it. Some fœtuses come wholly livid, others are paler; there is a remarkable variety in this respect. But all, shortly after they have respired, become more or less decidedly red. It is owing to the arterial blood which is formed and succeeds the venous blood that circulated in the cutaneous arteries. In this respect the state of the skin is in general an index of what goes on in the lungs. If an infant remains a long time of a violet colour, he either does not breathe or breathes with difficulty. The extremities of the hands and the feet in general become red the last. They are those in which the lividity consequently continues the longest, when this lividity is very evident. The blood which goes to the cutaneous organ, enters it in general in a very uniform manner; the cheeks do not appear to receive more of it in proportion. The sudden excitement it brings to the organ, raises its vital forces and renders it more fit to receive the impressions, which are new to it, of the surrounding bodies.
Observe in fact that a thousand different agents, the surrounding temperature, the air, dress, the fluid in which the fœtus is washed, the tongues of those quadrupeds who lick their young, carry to the skin an excitement which is so much the more felt by the fœtus, as it is not accustomed to it, and as there is an essential difference between these stimuli, and those to which it had been previously subjected. It is then that the remarkable sympathy which connects the skin with all the other organs, becomes especially necessary. Every thing within soon perceives the new excitements that are applied without. It is these excitements, those of the mucous surfaces at their origin and those of the whole of the bronchia, which especially bring into action many organs hitherto inactive. There happens then, what is observed in syncope, in which respiration, circulation, the cerebral action and many functions suspended by the affection, are suddenly roused upby external friction, by the irritation of the pituitary membrane, &c. The phenomena are different, but the principles from which they are derived in both cases are the same.
Then the organic sensibility is also raised. Transpiration is established. The skin begins to be an emunctory of different substances, which it did not before throw out; it becomes also capable of absorbing different principles applied to its surface. The skin of the fœtus is hardly ever the seat of any kind of eruptions; then pimples of different kinds frequently appear.
All the parts of the cutaneous organ do not however appear to be raised to the same degree of organic sensibility. For a long time after birth the skin of the cranium appears to be the centre of a more active life; it becomes the frequent seat of many eruptions, all of which denote an excess of the vital forces. The different kinds of scurf with which it is covered do not appear elsewhere. In this respect, the skin of the cranium follows, like the bones of this part and the cerebral membranes, the early development of the brain, which, on this account is the seat of diseases in infancy more than at any other age.
The skin of the face seems to be sometimes in less activity. In the first months after birth, it has not that bright colour which it will afterwards have upon the cheeks, and which does not commence until the development of the sinuses and dentition bring to this part more vital activity for the nutritive work. It is also towards this period that the eruptions of which this part of the cutaneous system is especially the seat, like those of the small-pox, measles, &c. begin to take place.
For a long time after birth the skin still preserves a remarkable degree of softness; a very great quantity of gelatine enters it; this substance is obtained from it with great ease by ebullition, which, continued for some time, finally melts this organ entirely. The fibrous part noticedby Seguin, is in very small quantity. I think it is this predominance of the gelatinous portion of the skin, which renders that of young animals easy of digestion. We know that in calves’ heads, roasted lamb, and small sucking pigs, prepared for our tables, it presents an aliment which the digestive juices alter with the greatest ease; whilst that of animals of mature age and especially old ones, cannot be digested by them. The carnivorous species tear their prey, feed upon its internal organs, the muscles especially, and leave the skin. Now what is it that makes the skin of young animals differ from that of old ones? It is because the gelatinous substance predominates over the fibrous in the first, and the fibrous predominates in the second.
The skin of children is gradually thickened; but it is not until the thirtieth year that it acquires the thickness that it is always to have afterwards. Till then the different ages are marked in this respect by different degrees. Take a portion of skin at birth, at two, six, ten, fifteen, twenty years, &c. you will see these differences in a remarkable manner. The more its thickness increases the more compact it becomes; it is because the fibrous substance tends constantly to predominate over the gelatinous.
As we advance in age, the adhesion of the internal surface of the dermis with the subjacent cellular texture becomes much greater. It is more difficult to detach one from the other. On the external surface the wrinkles of the face are gradually formed. Smiles and tears agitate the face of the infant the most. One is the expression of the happiness, the other of the uneasiness which all its passions produce in its mind. Now the wrinkles which weeping occasions on the eyelids are marked in rather a more permanent manner, either because weeping is more frequent than smiling, or because continual winking adds to the motion which weeping produces, or because less fat isfound in this place. As smiling is on the one hand more rare, and on the other much fat puffs out the cheeks of the infant, the perpendicular wrinkles formed by the muscles of the face, which in this motion separate transversely the features from within outwards, are much slower in forming. Besides, the nursing of the infant, which requires the contraction of its face from without inwards, opposes their formation. The wrinkles of the forehead are always very slow in forming, because the motions which contract the eyebrow, and those which wrinkle the forehead, are rare in the infant, who has hardly any of those dark passions which these motions serve to depict.
The growth of the dermoid system has not remarkable revolutions like that of most of the others; it goes on in an uniform manner. At the period of the growth of the hairs, it does not change, because this growth is absolutely foreign to it, these productions only passing through it. At puberty it increases in energy like all the other systems. Until then sweats had not been very copious; for, other things being equal, we may say that children sweat less in general than adults, and that the residue of their nutrition passes rather by the urine, which is probably the reason why they are so remarkably disposed to calculi. Beyond the twentieth year we begin to sweat more, and until old age, especially in summer, the fluids appear to go out in this way.
After growth, the skin continues for a long time to have great activity; the excess of life which animates it, renders it capable of influencing with ease the other organs if it be but a little excited. Hence the disposition to pneumonia, pleurisy, &c. from the action of cold on the skin in sweat, a state in which it is more disposed to exert an injurious influence upon the internal organs, becauseits forces are more excited. As to the different affections which result from this influence, they depend upon the internal organs upon which it is directed; so that the same sympathetic irradiations going from the skin, will produce sometimes an affection of the abdomen, sometimes a disease of the thorax, according to the age in which the abdominal or pectoral organs, predominating by their vitality, are more disposed to answer to the influence directed in general upon the whole economy.
The skin becomes more and more firm and resisting as we advance in age, as the fibrous substance is constantly tending to a predominance over the gelatinous. Less blood seems to be carried to it. It becomes less and less disposed to eruptions, so common in youth and infancy, &c. I will not speak of its other differences; for all that we have said of it in the preceding articles relates especially to the adult age.
I will only observe that if, during the greatest part of life, the skin be so fruitful a source of diseases, and the various alterations it experiences produce so frequent disorders in the internal organs, it is only owing to the varied causes of excitement to which it is every instant subjected. If the glands, the serous surfaces, &c. have an influence less frequently upon the other organs, it is because being deeply situated, and almost always in contact with the same excitants, they are not subject to so many revolutions in their vital forces. The secreted fluids and those exhaled in the serous and synovial systems are not, for the same reason, so much subject to those considerable increases, and those sudden suppressions which so frequently happen to the sweat.
Observe that society has also multiplied to a great extent the injurious excitements to which the skin is subjected. These excitements consist especially in the rapid passage from heat to cold, which makes the latter act very powerfully upon the cutaneous sensibility, whichlike that of all the other systems, answers so much the more to excitements made upon it, as they are different from those, whose action they had previously experienced. In the natural state, there is only the succession of the seasons; nature knows how to connect insensibly heat with cold, and to make the transition but rarely abrupt. But in society, the different garments, the artificial degrees of temperature of our apartments, degrees differing at first from that of the atmosphere, then varying greatly from each other, so that the same man who in winter enters thirty apartments, is often subjected to thirty different temperatures; the hard labour in which most men are engaged, and which makes them sweat copiously, every thing incessantly presents numerous causes which make the vital forces of the dermoid system vary rapidly. Thus the bronchial mucous surface is constantly in contact in cities, with a thousand excitements that are continually renewed, and with which the air is not charged in a natural state. Thus the alimentary substances, continually varying in their composition, temperature, &c. change the excitement of the gastric mucous surface, and are the source of many affections, from which most animals are exempt by the uniformity of their food.
If the skin and the mucous surfaces were always kept at the same degree of excitement by the constant uniformity of the stimuli, they would certainly be a much less fruitful source of diseases, as is clearly proved by the fœtus, which is hardly ever sick, because all the external causes which act upon its mucous and cutaneous sensibility, as the heat, the waters of the amnios and the parietes of the womb, do not vary until birth. At this period, animals brought into a new medium, find many more varieties in the stimuli which act upon them, even in a natural state and far from society; thus their diseases are naturally much more frequent after than before birth. In society, in which man has increased four, six and eventen times the number of the stimuli which affect the surfaces destined to be in contact with the external bodies, is it astonishing that the diseases should be so disproportioned to those of animals?
Towards the decline of life, the dermoid system becomes more and more firm and compact; it is softened with great difficulty by ebullition. The gelatine, which it yields, is less abundant and more hard and consistent. I think it would not be fit to make any kind of glue, even the strongest, unless mixed with that of adult animals. Its yellowish tinge becomes very deep. When it is cooled, it requires a much stronger and more durable fire to melt it; the fibrous portion of the dermis which does not melt or at least resists for a long time, is infinitely greater in proportion. It is like the bones in which the gelatinous portion is in an inverse ratio, and the earthy portion in a direct ratio to the age.
The dermoid texture becomes then like all the others, dense and stiff; it is not proper for our food, the teeth cannot tear it. Prepared with tannin, it is more resisting and less pliable, and cannot on that account serve for the same purposes as that taken from young animals. Every one knows the difference of the leather of calves and oxen, especially when the latter are old. This difference is owing first to the thickness, which being much greater in the second than the first, does not allow it to be so easily bent in different directions; and then to the nature of the texture itself. Cut in two horizontally a piece of the leather of an ox; each half will be as thin as a piece of calves skin, and yet it will be less pliable. I do not estimate here the varieties which may depend on the greater or less quantity of tannin that may be combined with it; I suppose the proportions to be all equal.
Submitted to desiccation, the human dermoid texture becomes much more stiff in old age than in the preceding ones. Maceration softens it with more difficulty. The hair of a child falls out much sooner by it than that of an old person; thus it requires longer to clean the skins of old animals than those of young ones; tanners know this very well. I would remark upon this subject, that the skins of animals, having more hairs pass through them, exhibit in comparison with that of man, an innumerable quantity of little pores on their external surface; which favours in them on this surface the action of tannin, which insinuating itself into the dermoid spaces and filling them completely with a new substance formed by the combination of tannin with gelatine, occupies entirely the texture of the spaces. The previous maceration to which the skin has been exposed, favours not only the removal of the hairs, but facilitates also to a great degree the entrance of the tannin, by separating the fibres of the spaces, by making them larger, and increasing the size of the external pores.
The more we advance in age, the less is the quantity of blood that penetrates the skin. The redness of the cheeks disappears in old people. We no longer see then the rosy complexion of the young man and even of the adult, and which arose from the vessels winding through the cellular texture of the spaces of the chorion.
The continual pressure of external objects increases then remarkably the adhesion of the subjacent cellular texture to the dermis. They are separated from each other with great difficulty by carrying the edge of a scalpel over the internal face of the chorion; a circumstance which is owing also to this, that the cellular texture having become more dense, is less easily torn; for this tearing is then necessary, considering the continuity of the sub-dermoid layer with that which enters the spaces.The exterior of the skin is uneven and rough. All the wrinkles of which we have spoken become infinitely more evident; many belong exclusively to this age.
The vital forces of the dermoid system are more weakened in old age than those of most of the others, because it is more excited during life by external bodies. Most of these bodies then make no impression upon it. The habit of feeling has blunted the animal sensibility. The touch is exercised but rarely; for, as I have observed, this sense requires to put it in action, the previous exercise of the will. We touch, because we have previously seen, heard, tasted, &c. in order to correct or confirm our other sensations; now the old man, to whom every thing around is known, to whom nothing is new, is induced to touch nothing. Compare in this respect the two extreme ages of life. The infant, to whom every thing that strikes his eyes, his ears, his nostrils, &c. is unknown, who finds in every thing that surrounds him new objects of sensation, wishes to touch and lay hold of every thing. Its little hands are in continual agitation. To touch is a pleasure to him, for every new object of sensation is agreeable. If in his last years, man was transported into the midst of objects that never before struck his senses, he would oftener exercise his touch; but none of those things excite him among which he has always lived. Hence why old age is not the age of enjoyments. In fact all our pleasures are almost relative; we have but little that is absolute; now as habit blunts all the relative pleasures, which cease because they have existed, the more the sensations are accumulated by time, the less there are of new ones left to be experienced, and the more are the sources of happiness dried up. For a contrary reason, the happiest age is infancy, because it has before it the whole field of sensations to go over. Man at every step of his career leaves behind him a cause of his enjoyments. When arrived at the end he finds only indifference, a state very suitable to his situation, since it diminishes the distance that separates life from death.
The organic sensibility of the skin is not less blunted in old age, than its animal sensibility; hence the following phenomena; 1st, contagious miasmata are absorbed with difficulty at this age; almost all pass over the cutaneous surface with impunity. 2d. The exhalation of sweat is uniformly less; it is hardly ever subject to those great increases, that are seen in the adult. 3d. The oily fluid is also furnished in much less quantity; hence the constant dryness of the exterior of the skin, the cracking of the epidermis in some cases, &c. 4th. All the diseases which suppose an increase of this organic sensibility are much more rare. Erysipelas and the different kinds of eruptions are a proof of it. When these affections take place, they have a character of remarkable slowness. 5th. The skin resists external cold much less; it loses easily the caloric of the body, which always tends to escape in order to be in equilibrium with that of the surrounding medium; thus old people are always fond of heat. 6th. I am well persuaded that the skin would resist also less, at this age, a degree of temperature greater than that of the body, and as it permits the internal caloric to be easily lost in a colder medium, it would allow the external to penetrate in a warmer one. It would be very curious to repeat, on the two extreme ages of life, the experiments of the English physicians.