Journal Article10.1111/J.1467-2494.2006.00344.X
Natural skin surface pH is on average below 5, which is beneficial for its resident flora
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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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Abstract: Variable skin pH values are being reported in literature, all in the acidic range but with a broad range from pH 4.0 to 7.0. In a multicentre study (N = 330), we have assessed the skin surface pH of the volar forearm before and after refraining from showering and cosmetic product application for 24 h. The average pH dropped from 5.12 +/- 0.56 to 4.93 +/- 0.45. On the basis of this pH drop, it is estimated that the 'natural' skin surface pH is on average 4.7, i.e. below 5. This is in line with existing literature, where a relatively large number of reports (c. 50%) actually describes pH values below 5.0; this is in contrast to the general assumption, that skin surface pH is on average between 5.0 and 6.0. Not only prior use of cosmetic products, especially soaps, have profound influence on skin surface pH, but the use of plain tap water, in Europe with a pH value generally around 8.0, will increase skin pH up to 6 h after application before returning to its 'natural' value of on average below 5.0. It is demonstrated that skin with pH values below 5.0 is in a better condition than skin with pH values above 5.0, as shown by measuring the biophysical parameters of barrier function, moisturization and scaling. The effect of pH on adhesion of resident skin microflora was also 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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pH directly regulates epidermal permeability barrier homeostasis, and stratum corneum integrity/cohesion.
Jean-Pierre Hachem,Debra Crumrine,Joachim W. Fluhr,Joachim W. Fluhr,Barbara E. Brown,Kenneth R. Feingold,Kenneth R. Feingold,Peter M. Elias,Peter M. Elias +8 more
TL;DR: It is demonstrated unequivocally that stratum corneum neutralization alone provokes stratumCorneum functional abnormalities, including aberrant permeability barrier homeostasis and decreased stratum Corneum integrity/cohesion, as well as the mechanisms responsible for these abnormalities.
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Generation of free fatty acids from phospholipids regulates stratum corneum acidification and integrity.
Joachim W. Fluhr,Jack Kao,Mahendra Kumar Jain,Sung Ku Ahn,Kenneth R. Feingold,Peter M. Elias +5 more
TL;DR: The importance of phospholipid-to-free-fatty-acid processing for normal stratum corneum acidification is demonstrated and the potentially important role of this pathway not only for barrier homeostasis but also for the dual functions of stratum Corneum integrity and cohesion is demonstrated.
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Objective assessment of the skin of children affected by atopic dermatitis: a study of pH, capacitance and TEWL in eczematous and clinically uninvolved skin.
Stefania Seidenari,Giulia Giusti +1 more
TL;DR: Data show that, in subjects with AD, skin functions undergo fluctuations according to the phase of the disease and support the hypothesis that the presence of active eczema determines an impairment of the barrier of uninvolved skin, even at sites far from active lesions.
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