A non-invasive optical method for__in vivo__determination of the concentration of carotenoid antioxidant substance lycopene in the skin, based on resonance Raman spectroscopy, is presented. The Ar^+^laser with an excitation wavelength at 514.5 nm was used, which corresponds to the maximum of the abs
In vivo Raman spectroscopy detects increased epidermal antioxidative potential with topically applied carotenoids
โ Scribed by J. Lademann; P.J. Caspers; A. van der Pol; H. Richter; A. Patzelt; L. Zastrow; M. Darvin; W. Sterry; J.W. Fluhr
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 91 KB
- Volume
- 6
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1612-2011
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โฆ Synopsis
In the present study, the distribution of the carotenoids as a marker for the complete antioxidative potential in human skin was investigated before and after the topical application of carotenoids by in vivo Raman spectroscopy with an excitation wavelength of 785 nm. The carotenoid profile was assessed after a short term topical application in 4 healthy volunteers. In the untreated skin, the highest concentration of natural carotenoids was detected in different layers of the stratum corneum (SC) close to the skin surface. After topical application of carotenoids, an increase in the antioxidative potential in the skin could be observed. Topically applied carotenoids penetrate deep into the epidermis down to approximately 24 ฮผm. This study supports the hypothesis that antioxidative substances are secreted via eccrine sweat glands and/or sebaceous glands to the skin surface. Subsequently they penetrate into the different layers of the SC.
Intensity, a.u.
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