Skin hydration dynamics investigated by electrical impedance techniques in vivo and in vitro

被引:0
|
作者
Maxim Morin
Tautgirdas Ruzgas
Per Svedenhag
Christopher D. Anderson
Stig Ollmar
Johan Engblom
Sebastian Björklund
机构
[1] Malmö University,Biofilms – Research Center for Biointerfaces
[2] Malmö University,Department of Biomedical Science, Faculty of Health and Society
[3] SciBase AB,Department of Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
[4] Linköping University,Department of Clinical Science, Intervention and Technology
[5] Karolinska Institutet,undefined
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Skin is easily accessible for transdermal drug delivery and also attractive for biomarker sampling. These applications are strongly influenced by hydration where elevated hydration generally leads to increased skin permeability. Thus, favorable transdermal delivery and extraction conditions can be easily obtained by exploiting elevated skin hydration. Here, we provide a detailed in vivo and in vitro investigation of the skin hydration dynamics using three techniques based on electrical impedance spectroscopy. Good correlation between in vivo and in vitro results is demonstrated, which implies that simple but realistic in vitro models can be used for further studies related to skin hydration (e.g., cosmetic testing). Importantly, the results show that hydration proceeds in two stages. Firstly, hydration between 5 and 10 min results in a drastic skin impedance change, which is interpreted as filling of superficial voids in skin with conducting electrolyte solution. Secondly, a subtle impedance change is observed over time, which is interpreted as leveling of the water gradient across skin leading to structural relaxation/changes of the macromolecular skin barrier components. With respect to transdermal drug delivery and extraction of biomarkers; 1 h of hydration is suggested to result in beneficial and stable conditions in terms of high skin permeability and extraction efficiency.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Adjunctive Diagnostic Methods for Skin Cancer Detection: A Review of Electrical Impedance-Based Techniques
    Anushree, U.
    Shetty, Sachin
    Kumar, Rajesh
    Bharati, Sanjay
    BIOELECTROMAGNETICS, 2022, 43 (03) : 193 - 210
  • [22] Opto-thermal in-vivo skin hydration measurements - a comparison study of different measurement techniques
    Xiao, P.
    Ciortea, L. I.
    Singh, H.
    Cui, Y.
    Berg, E. P.
    Imhof, R. E.
    15TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON PHOTOACOUSTIC AND PHOTOTHERMAL PHENOMENA (ICPPP15), 2010, 214
  • [23] The Tinsley LCR Databridge Model 6401 and electrical impedance measurements to evaluate skin integrity in vitro
    Fasano, WJ
    Hinderliter, PM
    TOXICOLOGY IN VITRO, 2004, 18 (05) : 725 - 729
  • [24] Electrical impedance spectroscopy: To evaluate and monitor organotypic model growth and skin barrier development in vitro
    van den Brink, N.
    Meesters, L.
    Pardow, F.
    Brewer, M. G.
    Roelofs, S.
    Homey, B.
    van den Bogaard, E.
    Smits, J. P.
    JOURNAL OF INVESTIGATIVE DERMATOLOGY, 2023, 143 (05) : S122 - S122
  • [25] Epidermal Differential Impedance Sensor for Conformal Skin Hydration Monitoring
    Huang, Xian
    Yeo, Woon-Hong
    Liu, Yuhao
    Rogers, John A.
    BIOINTERPHASES, 2012, 7 (1-4) : 1 - 9
  • [26] THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN POSTNATAL SKIN MATURATION AND ELECTRICAL SKIN IMPEDANCE
    MIZE, MM
    VILACORO, AA
    PRAGER, TC
    ARCHIVES OF DERMATOLOGY, 1989, 125 (05) : 647 - 650
  • [27] Enhanced skin permeation and hydration by magnetic field array: preliminary in-vitro and in-vivo assessment
    Benson, Heather A. E.
    Krishnan, Gayathri
    Edwards, Jeffrey
    Liew, Yih Miin
    Wallace, Vincent P.
    JOURNAL OF PHARMACY AND PHARMACOLOGY, 2010, 62 (06) : 696 - 701
  • [28] In vitro and in vivo confocal Raman study of human skin hydration:: Assessment of a new moisturizing agent, pMPC
    Chrit, L.
    Bastien, P.
    Biatry, B.
    Simonnet, J. -T.
    Potter, A.
    Minondo, A. M.
    Flament, F.
    Bazin, R.
    Sockalingum, G. D.
    Leroy, F.
    Manfait, M.
    Hadjur, C.
    BIOPOLYMERS, 2007, 85 (04) : 359 - 369
  • [29] Performing In Vivo and Ex Vivo Electrical Impedance Myography in Rodents
    Mortreux, Marie
    Nagy, Janice A.
    Zhong, Haowen
    Sung, Dong-Min
    Concepcion, Holly A.
    Leitner, Melanie
    Pazze, Laura Dalle
    Rutkove, Seward B.
    JOVE-JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS, 2022, (184):
  • [30] DYNAMIC SYSTEM FOR THE MEASUREMENT OF ELECTRICAL SKIN IMPEDANCE
    YAMAMOTO, Y
    YAMAMOTO, T
    MEDICAL & BIOLOGICAL ENGINEERING & COMPUTING, 1979, 17 (01) : 135 - 137