Guest guest Posted July 15, 2004 Report Share Posted July 15, 2004 Why is Jojoba wax/oil assimilated by the body so well? I've been using progesterone cream to regulate my menstrual cycle and it works so well, I want to know more about the permeability of skin. Why are some skin problems better served by oral medications or topical ointments? When we put things on our body which ones are absorbed? How? How fast? How much? Was my mom right when she said I was poisoning myself when I wrote with pen ink on my skin? How can those birth control and nicotine patches work in a time release way? Is it true that plain water is drying to the skin, wax creates a barrier on the skin and water/oil emulsions are aborbed? How so? Well, I've got a zillion questions on this subject, but maybe someone can get me started in the right direction? Thanks~ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 16, 2004 Report Share Posted July 16, 2004 Thank you Elaine and Maurice! You've given me enough reading to keep out of trouble for some time! :~) I always figured my mom was lying about the ink on my skin....but then this progesterone cream works, so then I was thinking how does this contraption (our skin) work really? ~ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 19, 2004 Report Share Posted July 19, 2004 > Certain substances -can- make > their way through the maze of lamellar lipid layers and all the other > skin structures, and eventually end up in the bloodstream. But they > have to be composed of very small, very light molecules. These are not > common substances we keep in our cupboards. I'm not clear on what you mean by common substances we keep in our cupboard= s. Certainly many mundane cosmetics products like sunscreens and moisturizers = penetrate the stratum corneum. According to Clin Dermatol. 2001 Jul-Aug;19(4):489-501. Percutaneous absorp= tion and delivery systems: " ...a lipophilic vehicle will easily penetrate facial skin where the SC is = lipid rich (10–20% by weight....This membrane (stratum corneum) allows no molecule to pass readil= y, but nearly all materials penetrate to some extent. " In fact, consider the case of sunscreens: " Functional ingredients like UV f= ilters, for example, should remain on the skin surface. If they penetrate, they would b= e beyond their site of action and so, from a functional point of view, skin penetration of= these ingredients is not desired. " Well: J Chromatogr B Analyt Technol Biomed Life Sci. 2004 Apr 25;803(2):225-31. Liquid chromatographic assay for common sunscreen agents: application to in= vivo assessment of skin penetration and systemic absorption in human volunteers.= The purpose of the present study was to develop a reverse-phase high-perfor= mance liquid chromatographic (HPLC) assay for quantifying four common sunscreen agents, = namely 2- hydroxy-4-methoxybenzophenone, 2-ethylhexyl-p-methoxycinnamate, 2- ethylhexylsalicylate (octylsalicylate) and salicylic acid 3,3,5-trimethcycl= ohexyl ester (homosalate) in a range of biological matrices. This assay was further appl= ied to study the skin penetration and systemic absorption of sunscreen filters after topical= application to human volunteers. Separation was achieved utilizing a Symmetry C(18) column= with methanol-water as the mobile phase. The assay permits analysis of the sunsc= reen agents in biological fluids, including bovine serum albumin (BSA) solution, plasma= and urine, and in human epidermis. The assay was linear (r2 > 0.99) with minimum detectabl= e limits of 0.8 ng for oxybenzone, 0.3 ng for octylmethoxycinnamate, and 2 ng for homos= alate and octylsalicylate. The inter- and intra-day variation for the four sunscreens= was less than 3% at the upper end of the linear range and less than 6% at the lower end. Rec= overies of sunscreens from plasma, 4% (w/v) BSA solution and epidermal membranes were = within the range of 91-104%. Recoveries from urine of the four sunscreens, and oxybenz= one with its metabolites were more than 86%. Up to approximately 1% of the applied dose = of oxybenzone and its metabolites was detected in the urine. Appreciable amoun= ts were also detected in the stratum corneum through tape stripping. The HPLC assay and = extraction procedures developed are sensitive, simple, rapid, accurate and reproducibl= e. Results from the preliminary clinical study demonstrate significant penetration of all s= unscreen agents into the skin, and oxybenzone and metabolites across the skin. yikes! One of the sunscreens I use even has polyacrylamide, which worries me. > > s it true that plain water is drying to the skin > > Not exactly. Paradoxically, water induces transepidermal water loss, so yes, it can be d= rying. > Nothing we make as cosmetic formulators is ever truly absorbed into the > skin. You wouldn't want it to be. I make topical antioxidant preparations, and, I do want them absorbed... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 19, 2004 Report Share Posted July 19, 2004 > Certain substances -can- make > their way through the maze of lamellar lipid layers and all the other > skin structures, and eventually end up in the bloodstream. But they > have to be composed of very small, very light molecules. These are not > common substances we keep in our cupboards. I'm not clear on what you mean by common substances we keep in our cupboard= s. Certainly many mundane cosmetics products like sunscreens and moisturizers = penetrate the stratum corneum. According to Clin Dermatol. 2001 Jul-Aug;19(4):489-501. Percutaneous absorp= tion and delivery systems: " ...a lipophilic vehicle will easily penetrate facial skin where the SC is = lipid rich (10–20% by weight....This membrane (stratum corneum) allows no molecule to pass readil= y, but nearly all materials penetrate to some extent. " In fact, consider the case of sunscreens: " Functional ingredients like UV f= ilters, for example, should remain on the skin surface. If they penetrate, they would b= e beyond their site of action and so, from a functional point of view, skin penetration of= these ingredients is not desired. " Well: J Chromatogr B Analyt Technol Biomed Life Sci. 2004 Apr 25;803(2):225-31. Liquid chromatographic assay for common sunscreen agents: application to in= vivo assessment of skin penetration and systemic absorption in human volunteers.= The purpose of the present study was to develop a reverse-phase high-perfor= mance liquid chromatographic (HPLC) assay for quantifying four common sunscreen agents, = namely 2- hydroxy-4-methoxybenzophenone, 2-ethylhexyl-p-methoxycinnamate, 2- ethylhexylsalicylate (octylsalicylate) and salicylic acid 3,3,5-trimethcycl= ohexyl ester (homosalate) in a range of biological matrices. This assay was further appl= ied to study the skin penetration and systemic absorption of sunscreen filters after topical= application to human volunteers. Separation was achieved utilizing a Symmetry C(18) column= with methanol-water as the mobile phase. The assay permits analysis of the sunsc= reen agents in biological fluids, including bovine serum albumin (BSA) solution, plasma= and urine, and in human epidermis. The assay was linear (r2 > 0.99) with minimum detectabl= e limits of 0.8 ng for oxybenzone, 0.3 ng for octylmethoxycinnamate, and 2 ng for homos= alate and octylsalicylate. The inter- and intra-day variation for the four sunscreens= was less than 3% at the upper end of the linear range and less than 6% at the lower end. Rec= overies of sunscreens from plasma, 4% (w/v) BSA solution and epidermal membranes were = within the range of 91-104%. Recoveries from urine of the four sunscreens, and oxybenz= one with its metabolites were more than 86%. Up to approximately 1% of the applied dose = of oxybenzone and its metabolites was detected in the urine. Appreciable amoun= ts were also detected in the stratum corneum through tape stripping. The HPLC assay and = extraction procedures developed are sensitive, simple, rapid, accurate and reproducibl= e. Results from the preliminary clinical study demonstrate significant penetration of all s= unscreen agents into the skin, and oxybenzone and metabolites across the skin. yikes! One of the sunscreens I use even has polyacrylamide, which worries me. > > s it true that plain water is drying to the skin > > Not exactly. Paradoxically, water induces transepidermal water loss, so yes, it can be d= rying. > Nothing we make as cosmetic formulators is ever truly absorbed into the > skin. You wouldn't want it to be. I make topical antioxidant preparations, and, I do want them absorbed... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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