| Literature DB >> 3668286 |
S M Al-Saidan1, A J Winfield, A B Selkirk.
Abstract
We heated flat sheets of neonatal rat stratum corneum for various times at temperatures between 40 and 90 degrees C before determining the permeability coefficient (Kp) of propanol and/or hexanol from water. Below 70 degrees C, Kp remained constant; at 75 degrees C, Kp increased linearly with exposure time; at 80 degrees C and above, there was a large increase in under 2 h, with no further increase on longer heating. There was a 15-fold increase in 6-h Kp between 70 degrees C and 80 degrees C, values being constant above 80 degrees C but at a figure less than for lipid-extracted stratum corneum. Thermal analysis showed that the increase in Kp corresponds to changes in the 80 degrees C lipid endotherm, suggesting that the increased Kp is due to a disordering of the lipid structures. The effect of treating preheated stratum corneum with dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) vapor for 16 h was also studied. Below 70 degrees C, Kp was increased five-fold, but between 70 and 80 degrees C this difference was eliminated, so that above 80 degrees C the Kp was the same as with heat treatment alone. We concluded that both heat and DMSO affect the lipid structures of stratum corneum. DMSO produced a small, reversible structural change, while the effect of heat is irreversible and produces a greater degree of disorder in the lipid structures, but the lipid still contributed to the barrier effect of stratum corneum.Entities:
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Year: 1987 PMID: 3668286 DOI: 10.1111/1523-1747.ep12471786
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Invest Dermatol ISSN: 0022-202X Impact factor: 8.551