Abstract
The purpose of this study was to examine the effect of prolonged surfactant exposure on mechanisms of anionic surfactant penetration into human skin. A radiolabeled probe (14-carbon sodium dodecyl sulfate (14C-SDS)) was used to trace the penetration of a model anionic surfactant, sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), into excised human skin and into an inert membrane composite in vitro. SDS dose varied from 0.03 to 15 mg/cm2, mimicking the exposure of a rinse-off cleanser on skin. Two surfactant exposure lengths were tested, 2 min and 5 h. SDS penetration into excised human skin was constant from 50 to 600 mM for skin samples exposed to SDS for 2 min. For skin samples exposed to SDS for 5 h, SDS penetration into skin increased log-linearly with increasing SDS concentration. SDS penetration into the inert membrane composite was constant from 50 to 600 mM SDS regardless of length of surfactant exposure. Penetration of the radiolabeled probe into skin and into the inert membrane correlated well with the monomeric concentration of the radiolabeled probe in the applied surfactant solution. These results support that monomer concentration is the driving force for initial SDS penetration into upper layers of the stratum corneum over a wide range of concentrations. With prolonged exposure, SDS penetrates the skin in a dose-dependent manner due to surfactant-induced damage to the skin.
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