Fig. 5.
A, shaft of the hair; B, root of the hair; C, cuticle of the hair; D, medullary substance of the hair.
E, external layer of the hair-follicle; F, middle layer of the hair-follicle; G, internal layer of the hair-follicle; H, papilla of the hair; I, external root-sheath; J, outer layer of the internal root-sheath; K, internal layer of the internal root-sheath.
(After Duhring.)
SYMPTOMATOLOGY.
The symptoms of cutaneous disease may be objective, subjective or both; and in some diseases, also, there may be systemic disturbance.
What do you mean by objective symptoms?
Those symptoms visible to the eye or touch.
What do you understand by subjective symptoms?
Those which relate to sensation, such as itching, tingling, burning, pain, tenderness, heat, anÆsthesia, and hyperÆsthesia.
What do you mean by systemic symptoms?
Those general symptoms, slight or profound, which are sometimes associated, primarily or secondarily, with the cutaneous disease, as, for example, the systemic disturbance in leprosy, pemphigus, and purpura hemorrhagica.
Into what two classes of lesions are the objective symptoms commonly divided?
Primary (or elementary), and
Secondary (or consecutive).