Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

Root sheath

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Dorlands /Elsevier
  
s_10/12733034

Root sheath

The inner or epidermic coat of the hair follicle is closely adherent to the root of the hair, and consists of two strata named respectively the outer and inner root sheaths.

Contents

Outer Root Sheath

The outer root sheath corresponds with the stratum mucosum (Stratum germinativum and Stratum Spinosum) of the epidermis, and resembles it in the rounded form and soft character of its cells; at the bottom of the hair follicle these cells become continuous with those of the root of the hair.

Inner Root Sheath

The inner root sheath consists of

  • (1) a delicate cuticle next the hair, composed of a single layer of imbricated scales with atrophied nuclei;
  • (2) Huxley's layer
  • (3) Henle's layer
  • The term "trichilemmal" refers to the outer root sheath.

    References

    Root sheath Wikipedia