The personal care industry has been making significant advancements in delivering skin wellness benefits to consumers in recent years. Store shelves are lined with moisturizers, lotions and body butters promising improved hydration and skin elasticity. With new products that have significant skin benefit claims, there is an increasing need for quantifiable support.
Consumers expect not only high-quality results from their skin care products, but also scientifically backed claims. Promises of hydration or elasticity mean little unless they are proven. As such, it is critical for formulators to have a comprehensive understanding of a new ingredient’s qualities.
To supply skin care formulators with scientifically proven ingredients, Stepan Personal Care has developed a program that uses cutting-edge technologies to measure the performance of new materials and demonstrate the potential benefits they can provide. By employing multiple, trusted measurement tools, the team can perform a thorough evaluation of potential skin benefits.
The program comprises DermaLab measurement tools and technology supplied through Cortex Technology. It features a powerful multi-parameter skin analysis system that provides the following measurements: skin conductance, transepidermal water loss (TEWL), elasticity, sebum content, pH levels, temperature and skin color.
But the most fundamental parameters the program is capable of measuring are skin moisture and barrier protection levels. These are gathered with industry-standard skin conductance and TEWL measurements. These parameters provide valuable information about potential benefits to skin health when measurements are taken before and after products, such as moisturizers, are applied.
Collecting Skin Health Measurements
Skin conductance is assessed by placing hydration pins made up of multiple small probes against the skin and measuring its capacity for conducting electricity. The delicate probes simply rest on the skin as slight pressure is applied. This provides information on hydration, as drier skin will inhibit electrical impulses from traveling through the skin.