Protection
The protection of skin: the role of antioxidants
Protecting your skin is the cornerstone of a good skincare routine. Protection can take many forms, from enhancing and reinforcing its existing function as a barrier to providing super-boosted support in the form of antioxidants.
The best skin protection is thought of as either optimising the most of the skin’s own potential as a barrier or adding to that barrier by either topical or internal means.
Antioxidants, both applied topically and consumed as part of your diet, have been long established to provide both short-term and long-term protection for skin as well as an effective correction to many skin issues from lines and dryness to pigmentation and dullness.
Antioxidants provide the counterpoint to environmental pollution and to external stressors and aggressors.
During normal cellular function reactive oxygen species (ROS) are generated by the oxidative metabolism that is essential for life. Exposure to UV-induced radiation increases ROS production and oxidative stress, causing photoageing (extrinsic ageing, as opposed to intrinsic ageing caused only by time) of skin. ROS combine with proteins, lipids and DNA altering cellular functions – hence the damage. We know by now, of course, the nature of the damage that UV-induced radiation causes the skin, including photoageing, inflammation, erythema and cancers, with superficial signs such as lines and wrinkles, altered pigmentation and loss of skin tone.
The aim of the use of antioxidants in cosmeceutical skincare is to provide an effective counterpoint to the ROS-generated threats to the skin, and the ensuing damage, and in doing so improve the skin’s look, feel and overall health. Among the antioxidants used in Skinesis formulas include co-enzyme Q10, which we include in products such as our Overnight Facial and our Ultimate Cleanse, the powerful amino acid thiotaine and the fatty acid alpha lipoic acid, also in Overnight Facial.
One of the biggest sources of research and development for antioxidants in cosmeceutical and dermatological use are botanical extracts. An emerging botanical extract discussed last year in Ageing Research Review is equol: “a polyphenolic/isoflavonoid molecule found in plants and food products and via gastrointestinal metabolism from precursor compounds.” It is hoped that equol could “reduce skin ageing along with its anti-ageing skin influences via reducing oxidative stress cascade events by a variety of biochemical/molecular actions and mechanisms to enhance human dermal health.”
As well as sunscreen, hydration is necessary to sustain collagen production and maintain the integrity of the dermis.
Preparation prior to the use of antioxidants is also key, both in the short term and the longer term and thus exfoliation is key. Prepared, exfoliated skin means it is more receptive to the products subsequently applied: when exfoliation is a consistent part of your routine, it helps the skin maintain its barrier function, boosts hydration and even collagen production.
Antioxidants are an investment in the future: a vital insurance policy for your skin.
References and sources
Lephart ED. Skin aging and oxidative stress: Equol's anti-aging effects via biochemical and molecular mechanisms.
Ageing Res Rev. 2016 Nov;31:36-54. doi: 10.1016/j.arr.2016.08.001. Epub 2016 Aug 9.
Lephart ED.
A high-potency, multimechanism skin care regimen provides significant antiaging effects: results from a double-blind, vehicle-controlled clinical trial.
J Drugs Dermatol. 2012 Dec;11(12):1447-54
Farris PK, Edison BL, Brouda I, Weinkauf RL, Green BA.
Effects of antioxidant supplementation on the aging process.
Clin Interv Aging. 2007 Sep; 2(3): 377–387.(Published online 2007 Sep.)
Domenico Fusco, Giuseppe Colloca, Maria Rita Lo Monaco, and Matteo Cesari.
Cosmeceuticals and active ingredients.
Clin Dermatol. 2009 Sep-Oct;27(5):461-8. doi: 10.1016/j.clindermatol.2009.05.009.
Lintner K, Mas-Chamberlin C, Mondon P, Peschard O, Lamy L.