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Influence of anatomical site and topical formulation on skin penetration of sunscreens

Sunscreen products are widely used to protect the skin from sun-related damage. Previous studies have shown that some sunscreen chemicals are absorbed across the skin to the systemic circulation. The current study shows that absorption into the skin of sunscreen chemicals applied to the face is up t...

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Autores principales: Benson, Heather AE, Sarveiya, Vikram, Risk, Stacey, Roberts, Michael S
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Dove Medical Press 2005
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1661631/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18360561
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author Benson, Heather AE
Sarveiya, Vikram
Risk, Stacey
Roberts, Michael S
author_facet Benson, Heather AE
Sarveiya, Vikram
Risk, Stacey
Roberts, Michael S
author_sort Benson, Heather AE
collection PubMed
description Sunscreen products are widely used to protect the skin from sun-related damage. Previous studies have shown that some sunscreen chemicals are absorbed across the skin to the systemic circulation. The current study shows that absorption into the skin of sunscreen chemicals applied to the face is up to four times greater than that of the same product applied to the back. This has implications for the way sunscreen products are formulated and may allow the use of less potent products on the face compared with the rest of the body. The effect of formulation vehicles on the release and skin penetration of the common sunscreen agent benzophenone-3 (common name oxybenzone) was also assessed. Penetration of benzophenone-3 across excised human epidermis and high-density polyethylene (HDPE) membrane was measured using in vitro Franz-type diffusion cells. Penetration and epidermal retention was measured following application of infinite and finite (epidermis only) doses of benzophenone-3 in five vehicles: liquid paraffin, coconut oil, 50:50 ethanol:coconut oil, aqueous cream BP, and oily cream BP. Highest benzophenone-3 skin retention was observed for the ethanol:coconut oil combination. Maximal and minimal benzophenone-3 fluxes were observed from liquid paraffin and coconut oil, respectively. The alcohol-based vehicle exhibited low benzophenone-3 release from the vehicle but high skin penetration and retention.
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spelling pubmed-16616312008-03-21 Influence of anatomical site and topical formulation on skin penetration of sunscreens Benson, Heather AE Sarveiya, Vikram Risk, Stacey Roberts, Michael S Ther Clin Risk Manag Original Research Sunscreen products are widely used to protect the skin from sun-related damage. Previous studies have shown that some sunscreen chemicals are absorbed across the skin to the systemic circulation. The current study shows that absorption into the skin of sunscreen chemicals applied to the face is up to four times greater than that of the same product applied to the back. This has implications for the way sunscreen products are formulated and may allow the use of less potent products on the face compared with the rest of the body. The effect of formulation vehicles on the release and skin penetration of the common sunscreen agent benzophenone-3 (common name oxybenzone) was also assessed. Penetration of benzophenone-3 across excised human epidermis and high-density polyethylene (HDPE) membrane was measured using in vitro Franz-type diffusion cells. Penetration and epidermal retention was measured following application of infinite and finite (epidermis only) doses of benzophenone-3 in five vehicles: liquid paraffin, coconut oil, 50:50 ethanol:coconut oil, aqueous cream BP, and oily cream BP. Highest benzophenone-3 skin retention was observed for the ethanol:coconut oil combination. Maximal and minimal benzophenone-3 fluxes were observed from liquid paraffin and coconut oil, respectively. The alcohol-based vehicle exhibited low benzophenone-3 release from the vehicle but high skin penetration and retention. Dove Medical Press 2005-09 2005-09 /pmc/articles/PMC1661631/ /pubmed/18360561 Text en © 2005 Dove Medical Press Limited. All rights reserved
spellingShingle Original Research
Benson, Heather AE
Sarveiya, Vikram
Risk, Stacey
Roberts, Michael S
Influence of anatomical site and topical formulation on skin penetration of sunscreens
title Influence of anatomical site and topical formulation on skin penetration of sunscreens
title_full Influence of anatomical site and topical formulation on skin penetration of sunscreens
title_fullStr Influence of anatomical site and topical formulation on skin penetration of sunscreens
title_full_unstemmed Influence of anatomical site and topical formulation on skin penetration of sunscreens
title_short Influence of anatomical site and topical formulation on skin penetration of sunscreens
title_sort influence of anatomical site and topical formulation on skin penetration of sunscreens
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1661631/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18360561
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