| Literature DB >> 31114284 |
Julie M Bianchini1, Qihong Zhang2, Gabriel Hanna2, Carol R Flach2, Hequn Wang1, Michael D Southall1, Richard Mendelsohn2, Manpreet Randhawa1.
Abstract
Introduction: As skin ages, it loses its ability to retain moisture and becomes rough and dry. This results in a clinically dull appearance with a loss of radiance, firmness, and suppleness. Symptoms can be improved with use of a moisturizer that builds and maintains skin hydration over time; however, most moisturizers that occlude the skin surface are perceived as heavy and greasy and are not consumer preferred.Entities:
Keywords: confocal Raman microscopy; dynamic skin barrier; moisturization; skin hydration; skin radiance
Year: 2019 PMID: 31114284 PMCID: PMC6489629 DOI: 10.2147/CCID.S196110
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Cosmet Investig Dermatol ISSN: 1178-7015
Figure S1Presence of liquid crystals in gel formulation.
The presence of liquid crystals in the gel cream formulation was confirmed by assessing the final formula under a polarizing microscope.
Figure 1Ex vivo skin sample characterization using confocal Raman microscopy. (A) Images of the lipid/protein ratio delineating the SC/VE boundary (described in Methods section 2.2) for untreated, competitive gel formula, and gel matrix formula (top to bottom). Two images from the same experiment are shown side by side. Scale bar =30 microns. (B) Images of the relative water content with layout the same as in (A). (C) Box plots of relative water content in the SC and VE displaying 10th, 25th, median, 75th and 90th percentiles of six experiments (two images each) for untreated, competitive gel formula, and gel matrix formula treatments. (D) Box plots of the relative amount of ordered lipid in the SC (based on median values of six experiments as displayed in (C) for untreated, competitive gel formula, and gel matrix formula treatments. *p≤0.05.
Figure 2Treatment with the gel matrix formula significantly improved skin hydration and barrier function. (A) Paired t-test evaluation showed significant (p≤0.05) improvements compared to baseline in corneometer measurements at week 1 and week 12. (B) 78.8% of subjects showed improvements in surface skin hydration as soon as week 1 and 89.3% of subjects showed improvements by week 12. (C, D) Paired t-test evaluation showed significant (p≤0.05) improvements compared to baseline in tewameter measurements at week 12, which corresponded to a 64.3% of subjects showing improvements in barrier function.
Figure 3Treatment with the gel matrix formula significantly improved facial skin appearance. Dermatologist grading of hydration related endpoints: radiance, clarity, tactile texture, and visual texture. (A) Mean percent change from baseline, and (B) the percentage of subjects with improvements at each time point. Paired t-test evaluation showed significant (p≤0.05) improvements compared to baseline for each efficacy parameter at all time points.
Treatment with the gel matrix formula represented a higher percentage of self-agree assessment at week 12. The percent of subjects that were in the top 2% agreement are shown for week 1 and week 12
| Self-Agree Assessment | Week 1 (Top 2% Agree) | Week 12 (Top 2% Agree) |
|---|---|---|
| This product improves skin tone and texture. | 63.6 | 75.9 |
| This product makes my skin feel plump, firm, and resilient. | 57.6 | 69.0 |
| This product made my skin look and feel smoother. | 78.8 | 82.8 |
| This product felt good on my skin. | 81.8 | 89.7 |
| I feel the moisture penetrating deep within my skin. | 60.6 | 69.0 |
| This product is an effective moisturizer. | 72.7 | 79.3 |