| Literature DB >> 28726004 |
Fanqi Kong1,2, Carlos Galzote3, Yuanyuan Duan4.
Abstract
This study investigated skin characteristics in healthy Chinese children aged from 1 to 10 years and compared these findings with similar measures from the child's mothers. Children aged 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 10 years (n = 29-30 per age group) and the child's mothers were enrolled in a single-visit cross-sectional study. Clinical parameters evaluated on the face, ventral forearm, and calf were softness, smoothness, erythema, edema, rash, dryness, and scaling. Instrumental evaluations included transepidermal water loss, moisture content, and water-holding capacity. The clinical evaluations indicated a general decrease in softness, smoothness, and overall skin condition with increased child age. In general, the child's clinical scores were better than in adults. Children had a more permeable skin barrier that matured to adult values by approximately 5 years of age. Mothers had greater skin moisture than children. Clinical and instrumental measures were consistent with skin being softer and smoother and in better overall condition in younger children. As the skin matured with age, higher scores were observed. Instrumental measures demonstrated a more permeable skin barrier in younger children compared with older children and with adults.Entities:
Keywords: Adult; Children; Skin barrier; Skin condition; Transepidermal water loss; Water handling
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28726004 PMCID: PMC5606948 DOI: 10.1007/s00403-017-1764-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Dermatol Res ISSN: 0340-3696 Impact factor: 3.017
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
|---|---|
| The participating mother is the one who regularly cares for the child. The mother must ≥18 years and be willing and able to follow all study directions, accept skin examination of the study | Child/mother participant who exhibits or is known to have atopic dermatitis, eczema, or other inflammatory disease, or mild-to-severe diaper rash or skin diseases/conditions that in the opinion of the investigator may affect the evaluation of study product or place the child at undue risk |
| Participating mother must be willing to not bathe her child and herself at least 12 h prior to the clinic visit and to have clean skin at the clinic visit | Any children and mothers with clinically determined moderate-to-severe dryness or clinically determined erythema, rash, or other skin condition |
| Mother must be willing to not apply any skin care product to the child and herself for 24 h before visit until after the visit is completed | Any condition requiring use of a topical or oral OTC or prescription medication, which, in the investigator’s judgment, makes the subject ineligible or places the subject at risk. Child vitamins were allowed |
| Individuals currently involved in another clinical study of any type | |
| Child participants who experienced moderate-to-severe diaper rash within 1 week prior to study start | |
| Child/mother participant who has experienced unusual hypersensitivity or allergic reactivity to fragrances and/or reaction/irritation to skin care toiletry products | |
| Child/mother participant with a known condition of asthma or any related breathing problems and/or for whom there is a family history of asthma | |
| Mother of the child is an employee of the investigator or study center or is a family member of the employees or the investigator |
Participant demographics by children’s age
| 1 year ( | 2 years ( | 3 years ( | 4 years ( | 5 years ( | 10 years ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Males, | 16 (53%) | 13 (43%) | 15 (52%) | 15 (50%) | 16 (53%) | 15 (50%) |
| Females, | 14 (47%) | 17 (57%) | 14 (48%) | 15 (50%) | 14 (47%) | 15 (50%) |
| Mother’s age, years (mean ± SD) | 29 ± 4 | 29 ± 4 | 32 ± 9 | 32 ± 7 | 33 ± 6 | 36 ± 7 |
SD standard deviation
Fig. 1Dermatological assessments. A number above the bar in an age group indicate that a significant difference was between this age group and the other age groups identified
Fig. 2Measures of skin barrier function and skin moisture content or hydration a TEWL, b Corneometer (capacitance) in cheek and ventral forearm, c Skicon (conductance), d water-handling time course in 1 year, and e water-handling changes with age. A number above the bar or symbol in a children’s age group mean that a significant difference was observed between this age group (the bar) and the groups shown (p < 0.05). *p < 0.05 children versus mothers (t test)
Fig. 3Skin hydration varies with age. Hydration calculated as ratio of Corneometer reading over TEWL value. TEWL transepidermal water loss