In vitro percutaneous permeation of repellent picaridin and sunscreen oxybenzone

In this thesis, a series of in vitro diffusion studies were performed to evaluate the transmembrane permeation of picaridin and oxybenzone across human epidermis and poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS) membrane. Transdermal permeation of picaridin and oxybenzone from four commercially available repellent...

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Main Author: Chen, Ting
Other Authors: Gu, Xiaochen (Pharmacy)
Language:en_US
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/3984
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spelling ndltd-MANITOBA-oai-mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca-1993-39842014-01-31T03:32:03Z In vitro percutaneous permeation of repellent picaridin and sunscreen oxybenzone Chen, Ting Gu, Xiaochen (Pharmacy) Burczynski, Frank (Pharmacy) Miller, Donald (Pharmacology) repellent picaridin sunscreen oxybenzone in vitro diffusion concurrent use In this thesis, a series of in vitro diffusion studies were performed to evaluate the transmembrane permeation of picaridin and oxybenzone across human epidermis and poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS) membrane. Transdermal permeation of picaridin and oxybenzone from four commercially available repellent and sunscreen products was also investigated by using different application concentrations and sequences. The results obtained were then compared to those of the repellent DEET and the sunscreen oxybenzone under identical experimental conditions. Permeation of picaridin and oxybenzone across human epidermis was suppressed when both compounds were used concurrently. Increasing concentration of the test compounds further reduced the permeation percentage of picaridin and oxybenzone. While permeation characteristics were correlative between human epidermis and artificial PDMS membrane, permeability of PDMS membrane was significantly larger than that of human epidermis. This finding was different from concurrent use of DEET and oxybenzone in which a synergistic permeation enhancement was observed between the two substances. Transdermal permeation of picaridin across human epidermis from various commercially available spray preparations was significantly lower than that of DEET from similar spray products, both alone and in combination with sunscreen oxybenzone. Concurrent application of the commercial products resulted in either no change or suppression of permeation of picaridin and oxybenzone. This finding was also different from concurrent application of DEET and oxybenzone using commercial preparations. In addition, permeation of picaridin and oxybenzone across human epidermis was dependent on application concentration, use sequence, and preparation type.It was concluded from this thesis that picaridin would be a better candidate for concurrent application with sunscreen preparations in terms of percutaneous permeation. 2010-04-19T15:42:24Z 2010-04-19T15:42:24Z 2010-04-19T15:42:24Z Gu, X., Chen, T., 2009. In vitro permeation characterization of repellent picaridin and sunscreen oxybenzone. Pharm. Dev. Technol. 14, 332-340. http://hdl.handle.net/1993/3984 en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic repellent picaridin
sunscreen oxybenzone
in vitro diffusion
concurrent use
spellingShingle repellent picaridin
sunscreen oxybenzone
in vitro diffusion
concurrent use
Chen, Ting
In vitro percutaneous permeation of repellent picaridin and sunscreen oxybenzone
description In this thesis, a series of in vitro diffusion studies were performed to evaluate the transmembrane permeation of picaridin and oxybenzone across human epidermis and poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS) membrane. Transdermal permeation of picaridin and oxybenzone from four commercially available repellent and sunscreen products was also investigated by using different application concentrations and sequences. The results obtained were then compared to those of the repellent DEET and the sunscreen oxybenzone under identical experimental conditions. Permeation of picaridin and oxybenzone across human epidermis was suppressed when both compounds were used concurrently. Increasing concentration of the test compounds further reduced the permeation percentage of picaridin and oxybenzone. While permeation characteristics were correlative between human epidermis and artificial PDMS membrane, permeability of PDMS membrane was significantly larger than that of human epidermis. This finding was different from concurrent use of DEET and oxybenzone in which a synergistic permeation enhancement was observed between the two substances. Transdermal permeation of picaridin across human epidermis from various commercially available spray preparations was significantly lower than that of DEET from similar spray products, both alone and in combination with sunscreen oxybenzone. Concurrent application of the commercial products resulted in either no change or suppression of permeation of picaridin and oxybenzone. This finding was also different from concurrent application of DEET and oxybenzone using commercial preparations. In addition, permeation of picaridin and oxybenzone across human epidermis was dependent on application concentration, use sequence, and preparation type.It was concluded from this thesis that picaridin would be a better candidate for concurrent application with sunscreen preparations in terms of percutaneous permeation.
author2 Gu, Xiaochen (Pharmacy)
author_facet Gu, Xiaochen (Pharmacy)
Chen, Ting
author Chen, Ting
author_sort Chen, Ting
title In vitro percutaneous permeation of repellent picaridin and sunscreen oxybenzone
title_short In vitro percutaneous permeation of repellent picaridin and sunscreen oxybenzone
title_full In vitro percutaneous permeation of repellent picaridin and sunscreen oxybenzone
title_fullStr In vitro percutaneous permeation of repellent picaridin and sunscreen oxybenzone
title_full_unstemmed In vitro percutaneous permeation of repellent picaridin and sunscreen oxybenzone
title_sort in vitro percutaneous permeation of repellent picaridin and sunscreen oxybenzone
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/3984
work_keys_str_mv AT chenting invitropercutaneouspermeationofrepellentpicaridinandsunscreenoxybenzone
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