Korean J Dermatol.  1996 Feb;34(1):38-45.

The Rate of Recovery after Disruption of the Skin Barrier and the composition of Human Surface Lipids at Different Anatomic Sites of Skin

Affiliations
  • 1Departsment of Dermatology, Yonsei University College of Medicine, Korea.
  • 2Departsment of Dermatology, Kyungbook National University School of Medicine, Korea.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Lipids in the stratum corneum which acts as a barrier prevents transepidermal water loss and percutaneous absorption of a substance differs at different anatomic sites of skin. No study has yet been done on the recovery rate of the skin barrier after its destruction in relation to anatomic sites.
OBJECTIVES
The purpose of this study was to measure the recovery rate of the skin barrier after its disruption in relation to anatomic sites and also to examine the lipid composition of skin surface lipids at different anatomic sites of skin.
METHODS
The study population consisted of 20 healthy male subjects. We used 3M Scotch tapes to remove the stratum corneum and examined the recovery rate by measuring the TEWL using an evaporimeter after 2.5, 6, 10, 24, 48 and 72 hours at eight different anatomic sites consisting of the post-auricular area, chest, abdomen, back, forearm, thigh and calf. The skin surface lipids were extracted using 99% ethanol at ten different anatomic sites including the face, chest, abdomen, back, upper arm, forearm, palm, thigh, shin and sole. The composition of skin surface lipids was determined by thin layer chromatography.
RESULTS
1. The transepidermal water loss was highest in the post-auricular area and ahdomen, back, thigh, forearm, upper arm, thieh and chest in a decreasing order, although there was no statistical significance(p>0.05). 2. The recovery rate was highest in the post-auricular area after 2.5 hours with a statistical significance compared to other sites except for the abdomen(p<0.05). 3. The recovery rate was also highest in the post-auricular area after 6, 10, 24, 48 and 72hrs compared with other sites with a statistical significance (p<0.01). 4. Lipid analysis of ten anatomic sites demonstrated that the concentration of cholesterol sulfate was highest on the face, that of cholesterol was highest on the back and that of sphingolipid was highest on the abdomen but there was no statistical significance.
CONCLUSION
The post-auricular area showed the fastest recovery rate after its barrier disruption which can be applied in the percutaneous absorption of substances. Also the composition of human skin surface lipids, especially epidermal lipids at different anatomic sites was not statistically different.

Keyword

Human skin; Skin Barrier; Recovery rate; Skin surface lipid

MeSH Terms

Abdomen
Arm
Cholesterol
Chromatography, Thin Layer
Ethanol
Forearm
Humans*
Male
Skin Absorption
Skin*
Thigh
Thorax
Cholesterol
Ethanol
Full Text Links
  • KJD
Actions
Cited
CITED
export Copy
Close
Share
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
Similar articles
Copyright © 2024 by Korean Association of Medical Journal Editors. All rights reserved.     E-mail: koreamed@kamje.or.kr