Skin fold
Skin folds or skinfolds are areas of skin where it folds. Many skin folds are distinct, heritable anatomical features, and may be used for identification of animal species, while others are non-specific and may be produced either by individual development of an organism or by arbitrary application of force to skin, either by the actions of the muscles of the body or by external force, e.g., gravity. Anatomical folds can also be found in other structures and tissues besides the skin, such as the ileocecal fold beneath the terminal ileum of the cecum.
Skin folds are of interest for cosmetology, as some kinds may be considered aesthetically undesirable, and for medicine, because some of them are susceptible to inflammation and infection.
Human skin folds
The following distinct skin fold types are among the roughly 100[1] identified in human anatomy:
- Nasolabial fold
- Epicanthal fold
- Interdigital folds (Plica Interdigitalis)
- Inframammary fold
- Triceps skinfold
- Webbed neck
- Vocal folds
See also
References
- ↑ Dorland's Illustrated Medical Dictionary, 27th edition, pp. 645–6