Reprint

Dietary Antioxidants and Cosmetics

Edited by
February 2024
252 pages
  • ISBN978-3-7258-0055-1 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-7258-0056-8 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Dietary Antioxidants and Cosmetics that was published in

Biology & Life Sciences
Summary

Dietary antioxidants represent the nutrients and secondary bioactive molecules in foods that modulate the oxidation and inflammation signaling pathways. The antioxidant molecules in the human diet constrain cardiovascular, cancer, and neurodegenerative diseases and combat the signs of aging. Recently, the cosmetics industry used food antioxidants as an alternative to petroleum-derived ingredients to respond to the consumers' demand for healthy products. New environmental policies and the increased demand for natural antioxidants have enticed researchers to develop valuable methods to recover them even from organic waste (i.e., agricultural waste, food waste, and beached algae). Food antioxidants are employed in topical applications such as "cosmeceuticals" (combining "cosmetic" and "pharmaceutical", these are cosmetics formulated with bioactive ingredients) and oral formulations such as "nutricosmetics" (food supplements containing nutrients and secondary active metabolites combined with cosmetic creams to enhance people’s appearance). New devices have been developed to improve the bioaccessibility of these active ingredients. This reprint collected research articles and reviews papers on food antioxidants and delivery systems capable of improving their cosmetic performance. The knowledge about the progress regarding the best methods for their isolation, determining the mechanism of action, the identifying the devices capable of improving their performance may allow the development of new, natural, high-performance cosmetics.

Format
  • Hardback
License and Copyright
© 2022 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
nanotechnology; nutraceutic; nutricosmetic; nanoceutic; phytochemical delivery; nanoemulsion; polymeric nanoparticles; edible nanocoating; nanocosmeceuticals; agri-food waste; pomegranate wastes; pomegranate’s flower by-products; green extraction; antioxidant capacity; UPLC-ESI-MS/MS analysis; antimicrobial activity; cosmeceutical; photoaging; anti-pigmentation; Swietenia macrophylla; natural product; skin whitening; skin repair and regeneration; wound healing; acne vulgaris; anti-microbial; bamboo leaf flavonoids; nanoliposome; biopolymer conjugation; in vitro release; skin permeability; anti-senescence activity; Sargassum horneri; fucosterol; human dermal fibroblasts; Nrf2/HO-1; MAPK; NF-κB; aromatic plant; abiotic stress; green extract; phenolics; tyrosinase inhibition; UV protecting extracts; yuzu tree; seed husk; nomilin; antioxidant; antimelanogenic; tyrosinase inhibitor; skin-whitening agent; reactive oxygen species; ellagic acid; chestnut wood; antioxidant; controlled release; transfersomes; HaCaT; 2,2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl (DPPH) assay; ferric reducing/antioxidant power (FRAP) assay; UVA; reactive oxygen species; fish waste streams valorisation; antioxidant activity; anti-inflammatory activity; antimicrobial activity; anti-ageing; anti-hyperpigmentation; cosmeceuticals; Ishige okamurae; Celluclast; sulfated polysaccharides; cosmeceutical effect; antioxidant activity; anti-inflammatory activity; photoprotective effect; 3D dermis spheroids; proteomics; carnosine; label free quantification; UVA; food antioxidant peptides; food analytical methods; large-scale biopeptide production; supplements; delivery systems; nutricosmetic; cosmeceutical; circular economy; waste recycling; anti-aging; skincare market; maca root; Lepidium meyenii; postbiotics; anti-melanogenesis; anti-inflammation; n/a

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