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An in vivo confocal Raman study of the delivery of trans retinol to the skin.
Appl Spectrosc. 2007 Aug; 61(8):804-11.AS

Abstract

The purpose of this study is to monitor in vivo the delivery of trans-retinol into human skin. Delivery to real systems, such as skin, can be extremely difficult to execute and is problematic to confirm and measure. So far, methods for studying the delivery of compounds through the skin are mostly ex vivo and so inherently influence the skin and may not translate directly to the in vivo situation. Raman spectroscopy is uniquely placed to be able to measure biological processes in vivo, and this paper shows that the trans-retinol penetration into the skin can successfully be measured in vivo using this technique. This study measured the volar forearm of volunteers treated with 0.3% trans-retinol in propylene glycol (PG)/ethanol and 0.3% trans-retinol in caprylic/capric acid triglyceride (MYRITOL318), an oil found in skin creams. Solutions were applied and then confocal Raman depth profiles were obtained of the stratum corneum (SC) and into the viable epidermis (VE) up to 10 hours after treatment. Remarkable differences between a penetrating and a nonpenetrating solution can clearly be observed. Treating with trans-retinol in PG/ethanol results in trans-retinol penetrating through the SC and into the VE. Its penetration was also observed to be highly correlated with the depth of penetration of the PG, which is well known as an efficient penetration enhancer. In contrast, while treating with trans-retinol in MYRITOL318, trans-retinol hardly penetrates at all. For the first time, the penetration of trans-retinol has been monitored directly after application of solutions, in vivo without skin excision. Here, the effect of two different solutions on the delivery of trans-retinol into the skin was measured very effectively in vivo by Raman spectroscopy.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Measurement Science Unit, Unilever R&D, Colworth Science Park, Sharnbrook, Bedford, The Netherlands. paul.pudney@unilever.comNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

17716398

Citation

Pudney, Paul D A., et al. "An in Vivo Confocal Raman Study of the Delivery of Trans Retinol to the Skin." Applied Spectroscopy, vol. 61, no. 8, 2007, pp. 804-11.
Pudney PD, Mélot M, Caspers PJ, et al. An in vivo confocal Raman study of the delivery of trans retinol to the skin. Appl Spectrosc. 2007;61(8):804-11.
Pudney, P. D., Mélot, M., Caspers, P. J., Van Der Pol, A., & Puppels, G. J. (2007). An in vivo confocal Raman study of the delivery of trans retinol to the skin. Applied Spectroscopy, 61(8), 804-11.
Pudney PD, et al. An in Vivo Confocal Raman Study of the Delivery of Trans Retinol to the Skin. Appl Spectrosc. 2007;61(8):804-11. PubMed PMID: 17716398.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - An in vivo confocal Raman study of the delivery of trans retinol to the skin. AU - Pudney,Paul D A, AU - Mélot,Mickaël, AU - Caspers,Peter J, AU - Van Der Pol,Andre, AU - Puppels,Gerwin J, PY - 2007/8/25/pubmed PY - 2007/9/21/medline PY - 2007/8/25/entrez SP - 804 EP - 11 JF - Applied spectroscopy JO - Appl Spectrosc VL - 61 IS - 8 N2 - The purpose of this study is to monitor in vivo the delivery of trans-retinol into human skin. Delivery to real systems, such as skin, can be extremely difficult to execute and is problematic to confirm and measure. So far, methods for studying the delivery of compounds through the skin are mostly ex vivo and so inherently influence the skin and may not translate directly to the in vivo situation. Raman spectroscopy is uniquely placed to be able to measure biological processes in vivo, and this paper shows that the trans-retinol penetration into the skin can successfully be measured in vivo using this technique. This study measured the volar forearm of volunteers treated with 0.3% trans-retinol in propylene glycol (PG)/ethanol and 0.3% trans-retinol in caprylic/capric acid triglyceride (MYRITOL318), an oil found in skin creams. Solutions were applied and then confocal Raman depth profiles were obtained of the stratum corneum (SC) and into the viable epidermis (VE) up to 10 hours after treatment. Remarkable differences between a penetrating and a nonpenetrating solution can clearly be observed. Treating with trans-retinol in PG/ethanol results in trans-retinol penetrating through the SC and into the VE. Its penetration was also observed to be highly correlated with the depth of penetration of the PG, which is well known as an efficient penetration enhancer. In contrast, while treating with trans-retinol in MYRITOL318, trans-retinol hardly penetrates at all. For the first time, the penetration of trans-retinol has been monitored directly after application of solutions, in vivo without skin excision. Here, the effect of two different solutions on the delivery of trans-retinol into the skin was measured very effectively in vivo by Raman spectroscopy. SN - 0003-7028 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/17716398/An_in_vivo_confocal_Raman_study_of_the_delivery_of_trans_retinol_to_the_skin_ L2 - https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1366/000370207781540042?url_ver=Z39.88-2003&rfr_id=ori:rid:crossref.org&rfr_dat=cr_pub=pubmed DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -