Journal Article10.1111/J.1396-0296.2004.04S1005.X
Moisturization and skin barrier function.
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TL;DR: The present paper reviews the current understanding of the biology of the stratum corneum, particularly its homeostatic mechanisms of hydration, and discusses how each maturation step leading to the formation of an effective moisture barrier—including corneocyte strengthening, lipid processing, and NMF generation—is influenced by the level of SC hydration.
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Abstract: Over the past decade, great progress has been made toward elucidating the structure and function of the stratum corneum (SC), the outermost layer of the epidermis. SC cells (corneocytes) protect against desiccation and environmental challenge by regulating water flux and retention. Maintenance of an optimal level of hydration by the SC is largely dependent on several factors. First, intercellular lamellar lipids, organized predominantly in an orthorhombic gel phase, provide an effective barrier to the passage of water through the tissue. Secondly, the diffusion path length also retards water loss, since water must traverse the tortuous path created by the SC layers and corneocyte envelopes. Thirdly, and equally important, is natural moisturizing factor (NMF), a complex mixture of low-molecular-weight, water-soluble compounds first formed within the corneocytes by degradation of the histidine-rich protein known as filaggrin. Each maturation step leading to the formation of an effective moisture barrier--including corneocyte strengthening, lipid processing, and NMF generation--is influenced by the level of SC hydration. These processes, as well as the final step of corneodesmolysis that mediates exfoliation, are often disturbed upon environmental challenge, resulting in dry, flaky skin conditions. The present paper reviews our current understanding of the biology of the SC, particularly its homeostatic mechanisms of hydration.
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Citations
Efficacy of a New Tonic Containing Urea, Lactate, Polidocanol, and Glycyrrhiza inflata Root Extract in the Treatment of a Dry, Itchy, and Subclinically Inflamed Scalp
Dorothea Schweiger,Caroline Baufeld,Philip Drescher,Bernhardt Oltrogge,Simone Höpfner,Aylin Mess,Juliane Lüttke,Frank Rippke,Alexander Filbry,Heiner Max +9 more
TL;DR: Due to the actives urea, lactate, polidocanol, and the anti-inflammatory licochalcone A, the new scalp tonic exhibited excellent performance in alleviating scalp dryness, itching, micro inflammation, and in normalizing disturbances of scalp lipids.
Bio-Integrated Wearable Systems: A Comprehensive Review
Tyler R. Ray,Jungil Choi,Amay J. Bandodkar,Siddharth Krishnan,Philipp Gutruf,Limei Tian,Roozbeh Ghaffari,John A. Rogers +7 more
TL;DR: This review summarizes the latest advances in this emerging field of "bio-integrated" technologies in a comprehensive manner that connects fundamental developments in chemistry, material science, and engineering with sensing technologies that have the potential for widespread deployment and societal benefit in human health care.
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Filaggrin in the frontline: role in skin barrier function and disease.
TL;DR: Recent human genetic studies strongly suggest that perturbation of skin barrier function as a result of reduction or complete loss of filaggrin expression leads to enhanced percutaneous transfer of allergens.
Video-Rate Molecular Imaging in Vivo with Stimulated Raman Scattering
Brian G. Saar,Christian W. Freudiger,Jay Reichman,C. Michael Stanley,Gary R. Holtom,X. Sunney Xie +5 more
TL;DR: In vivo SRS imaging in living animals and humans is enabled by substantially enhancing the collection of the backscattered signal and increasing the imaging speed by three orders of magnitude to video rate, which allows label-free in vivo imaging of water, lipid, and protein in skin and mapping of penetration pathways of topically applied drugs in mice and humans.
Natural skin surface pH is on average below 5, which is beneficial for its resident flora
TL;DR: Assessment of skin surface pH of the volar forearm before and after refraining from showering and cosmetic product application and the effect of pH on adhesion of resident skin microflora was assessed; an acid skin pH (4–4.5) keeps the resident bacterial flora attached to the skin, whereas an alkaline pH (8–9) promotes the dispersal from the skin.
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References
In vivo confocal Raman microspectroscopy of the skin: Noninvasive determination of molecular concentration profiles
TL;DR: In vivo confocal Raman spectroscopy is shown how it can be applied to determine the water concentration in the stratum corneum as a function of distance to the skin surface, with a depth resolution of 5 microm.
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The aged epidermal permeability barrier : structural, functional, and lipid biochemical abnormalities in humans and a senescent murine model
TL;DR: Assessment of barrier function in aged epidermis under basal conditions is misleading, since both barrier integrity and barrier repair are markedly abnormal, which may explain the increased susceptibility of intrinsically aged skin to exogenous and environmental insults.
Stratum corneum lipids: the effect of ageing and the seasons.
TL;DR: The decrease in the mass levels of intercellular lipids and the altered ratios of fatty acids esterified to ceramide 1, are likely to contribute to the increased susceptibility of aged skin to perturbation of barrier function and xerosis, particularly during the winter months.
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Electron probe analysis of human skin: Determination of the water concentration profile
TL;DR: The dominance of the water profile by a discontinuity suggests water loss is governed by a partitioned process, presumably a partitioning into the lipid domain.
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