Size Matters! Issues and Challenges with Nanoparticulate UV Filters.

Current problems in dermatology Pub Date : 2021-01-01 Epub Date: 2021-10-25 DOI:10.1159/000517632
Christian Surber, James Plautz, Stephan Dähnhardt-Pfeiffer, Uli Osterwalder
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

Preparations containing pigments have been used since ancient times to protect against negative effects of solar radiation. Since the 1950s, sunscreen products containing micronized TiO2 and ZnO have been marketed. These products were soon regarded as cosmetically unattrac-tive due to their property of remaining as a white paste on the skin, a result of particle sizes. In order to eliminate these unfavourable properties, particle size distribution was lowered into a range below 100 nm, a size threshold for decreasing the particle's optical property to reflect visible light. After 2000, new nanoparticulate organic filters were developed. Effects of both the inorganic and organic nanoparticulate substances - alone or in combination - with non-particulate UV filters were well documented and had shown great effectiveness. At the time, nanotechnology fuelled great hope in the progress of science and technology, including the health sector and cosmetics industry. Instead, influenced by images from the science fiction literature of self-replicating nanorobots destroying all living matter or health and environmental disasters caused by asbestos, fear of this new unknown amongst the general population has hindered acceptance and progress of nano-enabled products. Consumers have started to suspect that the particles permeate through skin, are absorbed by the blood and are distributed throughout the body, causing disease. Not least because of public pressure, cosmetics - which include sunscreen products - became the first product segment in which appropriately manufactured substances were subject to stringent rules. Despite advanced regulation and rigorous approval procedures for nanoparticulate UV filters, widespread reservations remain. Possible reasons could be a lack of knowledge of current legislation and unclear ideas about nature and behaviour of nanoparticles. Against this background, we discuss the nature and behaviour of nanoparticulate UV filters within finished products, on the skin and potentially in the skin, and the regulatory framework that ensures that nanoparticulate UV filters and the sunscreen products containing them are safe to use.

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规模很重要!纳米粒子紫外线过滤器的问题和挑战。
自古以来,人们就使用含有色素的制剂来防止太阳辐射的负面影响。自20世纪50年代以来,含有微二氧化钛和氧化锌的防晒产品已经上市。这些产品很快就被认为是没有美容吸引力的,因为它们在皮肤上停留为白色糊状物,这是颗粒大小的结果。为了消除这些不利的特性,颗粒尺寸分布被降低到100纳米以下的范围,这是降低颗粒反射可见光的光学特性的尺寸阈值。2000年以后,新型纳米颗粒有机过滤器被开发出来。无机和有机纳米颗粒物质——单独或联合——与非颗粒紫外线过滤器的效果都有很好的记录,并显示出很大的效果。当时,纳米技术给包括卫生部门和化妆品行业在内的科学和技术进步带来了巨大的希望。相反,受科幻小说中自我复制的纳米机器人摧毁所有生物或石棉造成的健康和环境灾难的形象的影响,普通大众对这种新的未知事物的恐惧阻碍了纳米产品的接受和进步。消费者已经开始怀疑这些微粒渗透皮肤,被血液吸收并分布在全身,从而引发疾病。尤其是由于公众的压力,化妆品(包括防晒产品)成为第一个对适当生产的物质进行严格规定的产品领域。尽管先进的法规和严格的审批程序,纳米颗粒紫外线过滤器,广泛的保留意见仍然存在。可能的原因可能是缺乏对当前立法的了解以及对纳米粒子的性质和行为的不清楚。在此背景下,我们讨论了成品中纳米颗粒紫外线过滤器的性质和行为,在皮肤上和潜在的皮肤中,以及确保纳米颗粒紫外线过滤器和含有它们的防晒产品安全使用的监管框架。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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