Wednesday 31 May 2023

Skin Microbiome a New Insight in Cosmetic Science-Future Aspects in Management of Skin Diseases and Maintenance of Healthy Skin | Chapter 4 | Research Developments in Medicine and Medical Science Vol. 10

 The human skin holds a diverse range of microorganisms that asserts local immune system in the carcass. An environmental condition like ultraviolet fallout also causes serious skin environments. Skin microbiome a new insight in beautifying technology for support of healthy skin and management of skin afflictions such as severe type acne and chronic skin afflictions which involve inflammatory skin environments like eczema, (atopic dermatitis), tingling, polymorphic light ejection, and graft-versus-host disease (GvHD). The skin disorders created by UV Radiation are chronic swelling, immunological modulation, photoaging, skin tumor and skin tanning produced by sunburns, etc. Skin microbiota plays a meaningful role in upholding skin tone and directing skin diseases through incorporation of probiotics and prebiotics. Human corpse contains good and injurious microorganisms which maintain the skin microbiome by way of probiotics, prebiotics and postbiotics. Probiotics and prebiotics contain companionable bacteria and hurtful bacteria present in the human body. Phototherapy a up-to-date treatment used to treat neoplastic skin environments including cutaneous T cell lymphoma and immunomodulators to uphold immunity in the carcass. This chapter leads an insight into a significant part of probiotics and prebiotics in the management of skin ailments, antioxidant properties, anti-instigative activity, antagonistic-aging, antagonistic-carcinogenic effects. In this phase, we describe and share the future facets on the potential advantages of novel treatment approaches that use bacteria, probiotics, and prebiotics as modulators of the skin diseases.

Author(s) Details:

R. Chandrasekar,
Faculty of Pharmacy, Department of Pharmacognosy, Seven Hills College of Pharmacy, Tirupati, Chittoor, Andhrapradesh, India.

B. Sivagami,
Faculty of Pharmacy, Department of Pharmaceutical Analysis, Seven Hills College of Pharmacy, Tirupati, Chittoor, Andhrapradesh, India.

M. Niranjan Babu,
Faculty of Pharmacy, Department of Pharmacognosy, Seven Hills College of Pharmacy, Tirupati, Chittoor, Andhrapradesh, India.

B. Dharani Rathna,
Department of Pharmaceutical Analysis, Seven Hills College of Pharmacy, Tirupati, Chittoor, Andhrapradesh, India.

B. M. Bhargav,
Department of Pharmaceutical Analysis, Seven Hills College of Pharmacy, Tirupati, Chittoor, Andhrapradesh, India

J. Tejovathi,
Department of Pharmaceutical Analysis, Seven Hills College of Pharmacy, Tirupati, Chittoor, Andhrapradesh, India.

K. Sowmya,
Department of Pharmaceutical Analysis, Seven Hills College of Pharmacy, Tirupati, Chittoor, Andhrapradesh, India.

M. Padmavathi,
Department of Pharmaceutical Analysis, Seven Hills College of Pharmacy, Tirupati, Chittoor, Andhrapradesh, India.

Shaik Mohammad Shareef,
Department of Pharmaceutical Analysis, Seven Hills College of Pharmacy, Tirupati, Chittoor, Andhrapradesh, India

S. Diwakar,
Department of Pharmaceutical Analysis, Seven Hills College of Pharmacy, Tirupati, Chittoor, Andhrapradesh, India.

Please see the link here: https://stm.bookpi.org/RDMMS-V10/article/view/10675

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