Microencapsulation, Cream Development, and Controlled Clinical Study of an Upcycled Polyphenolic Extract Combined with sh-Oligopeptide-1
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Mayayo, Teo; Russo, Gabriella; Jiménez-Escobar, Ana Leticia; Pérez González, Noelia; Clares Naveros, Beatriz; Ruiz Martínez, Adolfina; Tomás-Cobos, Lidia; Valera, Ana; Gómez-Farto, Almudena; Arias Santiago, Salvador; Montero Vílchez, TrinidadEditorial
MDPI
Materia
upcycling polyphenols sh-oligopeptide-1
Date
2024-11-20Referencia bibliográfica
Mayayo, T. et. al. Cosmetics 2024, 11, 198. [https://doi.org/10.3390/cosmetics11060198]
Patrocinador
Instituto de Investigación Biotecnológica, Farmacéutica y Medicamentos Huérfanos, S.L; Centre for the Development of Industrial Technology (Spain), Program FEDER INTERCONECTA (ITC-20181113)Résumé
Olive mills produce pomace as a by-product of olive oil production process, which has a
negative environmental impact. In this study, the dry extract of pomace (OG2), rich in polyphenols,
was used for cosmetic purposes. The polyphenolic extract was encapsulated together with sholigopeptide-
1 using cellulose fibres by spray-drying technology. Cytotoxicity and antistress cell
studies were carried out using a modified cell line (THP1). Based on the results, a single, randomised,
self-controlled study was conducted to evaluate the cream in thirty healthy volunteers. Statistical
analysis was performed using a paired samples t-test. Skin moisture increased in the treated forearm
(p-value < 0.000). There was an increase in elasticity in the treated forearm (p-value 0.042). TEWL
decreased after one week of cream application (p-value 0.099). The results of this clinical study
showed that the cream improved barrier function after one week of application on healthy skin.