| Literature DB >> 29958439 |
Noureddine Halla1,2, Isabel P Fernandes3,4, Sandrina A Heleno5,6, Patrícia Costa7, Zahia Boucherit-Otmani8, Kebir Boucherit9, Alírio E Rodrigues10, Isabel C F R Ferreira11, Maria Filomena Barreiro12,13.
Abstract
Cosmetics, like any product containing water and organic/inorganic compounds, require preservation against microbial contamination to guarantee consumer’s safety and to increase their shelf-life. The microbiological safety has as main goal of consumer protection against potentially pathogenic microorganisms, together with the product’s preservation resulting from biological and physicochemical deterioration. This is ensured by chemical, physical, or physicochemical strategies. The most common strategy is based on the application of antimicrobial agents, either by using synthetic or natural compounds, or even multifunctional ingredients. Current validation of a preservation system follow the application of good manufacturing practices (GMPs), the control of the raw material, and the verification of the preservative effect by suitable methodologies, including the challenge test. Among the preservatives described in the positive lists of regulations, there are parabens, isothiasolinone, organic acids, formaldehyde releasers, triclosan, and chlorhexidine. These chemical agents have different mechanisms of antimicrobial action, depending on their chemical structure and functional group’s reactivity. Preservatives act on several cell targets; however, they might present toxic effects to the consumer. Indeed, their use at high concentrations is more effective from the preservation viewpoint being, however, toxic for the consumer, whereas at low concentrations microbial resistance can develop.Entities:
Keywords: antimicrobial synthetic agents; consumers’ protection; cosmetic preservatives; microbiological safety; preservatives efficacy; toxic effects
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29958439 PMCID: PMC6099538 DOI: 10.3390/molecules23071571
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Classification of cosmetic products with antimicrobial effects.
| Class | Product | Application | Targeted Microorganism | Active Ingredient | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Leave-on products | Deodorants | Inhibit the bacterial metabolism responsible for the degradation of sweat and subsequent production of unpleasant body odor | Aluminum chlorohydrate, alcohol, triclosan, 3,4,4′-trichlorocarbanilide, chlorhexidine | [ | |
| Antiperspirants | Suppress the release of sweat and eliminates the bacteria responsible for the unpleasant body odor production | Aluminum chlorohydrate, aluminum salts, zirconium-aluminum tetrachlorohydrex glycine complex | |||
| Rinse-off hair products | Anti-dandruff shampoos | Reduces species of | The genus | Zinc pyrithione, salicylic acid, imidazole derivatives, glycolic acid, steroids, coal, tar and sulfur derivatives, piroctone olamine | [ |
| Skin care products | Antibacterial soap bars | Cleaning and bacterial reduction |
| Triclocarban, triclosan | [ |
| Disinfectants | Alcohol, triclosan, natural ingredients and glycerin | ||||
| Antibacterial wipes | Benzalkonium chloride | ||||
| Face care products | Acne products and antiseptic cuticle treatment | Skin care; Cleaning and anti-acne treatments |
| Benzalkonium chloride | [ |
| Oral care products | Toothpaste | Prevention of bacterial growth and plaque formation | Triclosan, chlorhexidine, natural extracts | [ | |
| Mouthwash | Alcohol+triclosan or alcohol+chlorhexidine | ||||
| Antibacterial toothbrushes | Inhibit bacteria growth | Microban®, triclosan |
Figure 1Causes, consequences. and ways of preventing cosmetics contamination [10,16,17,28,29,30,31,32].
Figure 2Preservative effectiveness testing comparison between the Japan, USA and European Pharmacopeias [38,108,109] where: B: bacteria, Y: yeast, M: molds, USP: United States pharmacopeia, JP: Japanese pharmacopoeia, EP: European pharmacopoeia, TSA: soybean-casein digest agar, and SDA: sabouraud dextrose agar.
Figure 3Chemical structures of some preservatives used in cosmetics.
Figure 4Steps followed in the analysis of cosmetic preservatives from the sample treatment to the analytical methods [137,159,160] where: µECD: microelectron capture detector; APCI: atmospheric pressure chemical ionization; APPI: atmospheric pressure photoionization; BA: benzoic acid; BRP: bronopol; BRX: bronidox; BzOH: benzyl alcohol; BZs: benzoates other than sodium benzoate; CE: capillary electrophoresis; CLD: chemiluminescent detection; DAD: photodiode array detection; DART: direct-analysis-in-real-time; DHA: dehydroacetic acid; EC (D): electrochemical (detector); EI: electron impact; ELISA: enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; ESI: electrospray ionization; FIA: flow injection analysis; FID: flame-ionization detector; GC: gas chromatography; HLB: divinylbenzene/n-vinylpyrrolidone copolymer; HPCE: high-performance capillary electrophoresis; HPLC: high-performance liquid chromatography; ICP: inductively-coupled plasma; IPBC: iodopropynyl butylcarbamate; IU: imidazolidinyl urea; LC: liquid chromatography; MCI: methylchloroisothiazolinone; MEKC: micellar electrokinetic chromatography; MI: methylisothiazolinone; MIP: molecular imprinted polymer; MIPDI: microwave-induced plasma desorption ionization; MS: mass spectrometry; MWCNTs: multi-walled carbon nanotubes; PB: parabens; PhEtOH: phenoxyethanol; SA: salicylic acid; SOA: sorbic acid; TCC: triclocarban; TCS: triclosan; TD: thermal desorption; UHPLC: ultra-high performance liquid chromatography; UPLC: ultra-performance liquid chromatography; UV: ultraviolet; UV–VIS: ultraviolet–visible.
Influence of some cosmetic constituents on preservation.
| Component | Influence | Effects | Example | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Solvent | Water | Negative | Main source of contamination | - | [ |
| Ethanol | Positive | Antimicrobial agent | Ethanol (more than 30%) | ||
| Thickener and emulsifiers based on lipids | - | - | Fats, oils, waxes | ||
| Surfactants | Cationic | Positive | Perturbation of cell membranes or increase in membrane porosity which also facilitates penetration of other antimicrobial substances | Alkylamines, quaternary ammonium compounds | [ |
| Anionic | Sulfates, sulfonates and carboxylates | ||||
| Amphoteric | Alkylamidobetain and alkylamidoglycinate | ||||
| Non-ionic | Fatty acids monoethanolamides, ethoxylated fatty alcohols and alkyl polyglucosides | ||||
| Humectants | Positive | At concentrations of 5 to 10%, they can effectively reduce the amount of biologically available water. | Sugars (sorbitol), glycerol and gylcol | [ | |
| Gelling agents | Positive | Antimicrobial agent and reduction of biologically available water | Polyacrylic acids and hydroxypropyl methylcellulose | [ | |
| Emollients | Negative | Promote the growth of microorganisms | Silicon derivatives, proteins (milk proteins and albumin hydrolyzate) | [ | |
| Plants extracts and mineral raw materials | Positive or negative | Positive: polyphenols can exert antibacterial effect; Negative: source of contamination especially for spores, mycotoxins and Clostridium | Melissa officinalis extract, rosmarinic acid and phenylethyl alcohol | [ | |