Green Tea the Benefits of Health Over the past 15–20 years, a number of other research studies have been conducted to determine what health benefits can be attributed to consumption of green tea and its extracts. This research has shown that green tea has a variety of potential health benefits. These benefits include anticarcinogenic, anti-inflammatory, antimicrobial, and antioxidant properties, and benefits in cardiovascular disease and oral health. While much of this research has been performed in vitro, and a significant amount of the research done in vivo, using animal models, this will focus mainly on studies conducted with human subjects plus pertinent information from the other types of studies. Anticarcinogenic Properties of Green Tea Cancer is currently a major source of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Billions of dollars in research monies have been poured into cancer research over the past 50 plus years, and yet we do not se...
Skin acts as a natural barrier between internal
and external environments thus plays an important role in vital biological
functions such as protection against mechanical/chemical damages,
micro-organisms, ultraviolet damage.
Nutrition has a critical impact on strengthening
skin’s capabilities to fight against these multiple aggression. Nutritional
deficiencies are often associated with skin health disorders, while diets can
either positively or negatively influence skin condition.
More recently, the concept of nutritional
supplementation has emerged as a new strategy in the daily practice of
dermatology as well as a complementary approach to topical cosmetics in the
field of beauty.
Focusing on human clinical data, this paper
proposes to illustrate the link between skin health and nutrition and to
exemplify the beneficial actions of nutritional supplementation in skin health
and beauty
Introduction
Skin is
the most extended and heaviest organ of the human body acting as a barrier
between the internal and external environment. Skin structure associates
tissues from various origins (epithelial, connective, vascular, muscular and
nervous) and is organized in three different layers: the epidermis, the dermis
and the hypodermis.
With
the exception of epidermis which is a non-vascular tissue, skin possesses a
rich vascular network involved in tissues feeding, thermoregulation, wound
healing, immune reactions and control of blood pressure.
Nutrition
is defined as a biological process in animals and plants involving the intake
of food and its subsequent assimilation into the tissues.
From
the 20th century scientists have identified different nutrients, which
constitute the food and have defined nutritional standards and recommendations
in order to prevent deficiencies and to promote human health.
Nutritional
supplements are defined as concentrated sources of nutrients or other
substances with a nutritional or physiological effect that supplement the
normal diet.
At the
beginning of the 21st century, increase life expectancy has emerged
as new preoccupation for industrial countries and for nutritional science,
which one of the challenges is to offer new strategies to improve the quality
of human life.
In this
context, nutritional supplements may be used to optimize diet and consequently
to improve quality of life. Increased life expectancy is also associated with a
need to appear healthy and handsome. Beside the traditional use of topical
care, nutritional supplements have emerged as a new strategy to improve skin
beauty.
Focusing on human clinical
data, this paper proposes to illustrate the link between skin health and
nutrition, and more particular the
effects of malnutrition and
diets on cutaneous disorders and beneficial actions of nutritional
supplementation in skin health and beauty.
Influence of Diet
Deficiencies and Specific Diets on Skin Health
Nutrition is one of the most
important parameters that is involved in modulating skin health and condition.
Some of our understandings come from the
description of the cutaneous manifestations of nutritional deficiencies.
In the 1970s, Vasantha et al. demonstrated
that kwashiorkor, a severe protein/calorie deficiency, was associated with skin
biochemical changes in children, thus providing an explanation for the
occurrence of cutaneous lesions of this syndrome. More recently, the reduction
of total melanin content of scalp hair has been reported to be a characteristic
of malnutrition in children.
The impact of malnutrition on
skin health is also illustrated by skin changes (xerosis, hair effluvium, nail
modifications…) observed in anorexia nervosa.
Vitamin deficiencies whether
due to malnutrition or other factors (malabsorption and genetic defects) are
associated with various dermatological modifications such as pellagra the
classical image of niacin deficit, or hyperpigmentation which is associated
with B12 deficiency.
Also trace elements are essential
for skin health and their deficit is related to skin modifications.Malnutrition
as well as excessive food intake can impair skin physiology. Indeed, obese
people exhibit significant increase in transepidermal water loss suggesting an
alteration of skin barrier function.
Furthermore, obesity may affect
sebum production, contribute to micro and macro circulation changes, and modify
collagen metabolism. Finally, obesity is associated with a number of dermatoses
such as acanthosis nigricans, acrochordons and keratosis pilaris.
Wound
healing is a complex phenomenon involving interactions between different cells
type, cytokine, and the extracellular matrix. Nutritional deficiencies can
impair wound healing, while some nutrients (vitamins A and C, zinc, glucosamine)
may reduce healing time and improve wound quality.
Still
controversial, the link between diet and acne has been recently highlighted by
a study on male volunteers with acne showing a greater improvement in total
lesion count in the low glycemic diet group compared to the control group.
In the
same study, acne lesion count has been shown to be correlated with the increase
of the ratio of saturated to monounsaturated fatty acids of skin triglycerides.
Atopic
dermatitis (AD) is a chronic inflammatory skin disorder characterized by an
impaired skin barrier function associated with a Th2-driven T cells
overproduction. Foods hypersensitivity seems to play a pathogenic role in the
development of AD lesions and
dietary exclusion of specific food has been reported to improve the disease in
children.
Moreover,
Tanaka et al. have recently
evaluated the effect of a vegetarian diet as an alternative therapy for the
management of AD. After 2 months of this specific regimen, the SCORAD (SCORing
Atopic Dermatitis) decreased by almost 50%.
Diet
has also been described to play a key role in the etiology and pathogenesis of
psoriasis, one of the most common chronic skin inflammatory disorders.
Low energy diet could be an important adjuvant
factor in the prevention and treatment of psoriasis.
Vegetarian
diet as well as fasting periods may be also beneficial. These effects could be explained by a lack of
arachidonic acid, limiting thus the inflammation cascade and a reduction of
oxidative stress due to caloric restriction.
Furthermore some evidences
exist about the influence of food on the developpement of UV-induced skin
lesions. Indeed, a review of the results obtained in epidemiological studies
suggests a positive relationship between fat intake and both basal and squamous
cell carcinoma.
A few years later, the same
team demonstrated, in a cohort of 1,360 adults, that diet with high meat and
fat intake significantly increases the risk of squamous cell carcinoma,
particularly in persons with history of skin cancer.
In 2009, the results of a prospective study
showed a moderate decrease of actinic keratosis among the highest consumers of
fish oil. In the same way, some dietary factors present in the
Mediterranean diet might protect against skin melanoma.
Beneficial Effects of Nutritional Supplementation on Skin
Health and Beauty
Many
attempts have been made to improve skin health and beauty by changing or by
supplementing the diet.26 In 2001, Boelsma et al. reviewed the effects of vitamins, carotenoids
and fatty acids supplementation in optimizing skin condition and preventing
skin diseases and concluded that nutritional factors show potential beneficial
actions on the skin.
Specific nutritional
interventions using probiotics are described in some studies to exert
beneficial effects in the treatment and/or prevention of AD, with a decrease in
SCORAD or a decrease of the frequency of AD in the first two years of life.
In a recent paper Koch et al.
reported the beneficial effect (decrease of SCORAD) of docohexaenoic acid
supplementation in atopic eczema. In the same way, oral evening primerose oil
has shown to have a beneficial effect in eczema30 and a dietary
supplement with fish oil has shown beneficial effect in the management of
psoriasis and eczema.
Photoprotection obtained by
nutrients is well documented. Skin exposure to ultra-violet (UV) leads directly
or indirectly through the generation of reactive oxygen species to a large
range of photodamage affecting cellular lipids, proteins and DNA. It is
involved in erythema appearance, premature skin aging, photoimmunosuppression
and skin cancer.
The
most frequent damage induced by UV exposure is sunburn, and evidence of
nutritional supplementation in sunburns’ prevention has been reported. β-carotene
(from 15 to 180 mg/day) and lycopene (up to 10 mg/day), two efficient singlet
oxygen quenchers, have been shown to prevent sunburn in humans.
Systemic administration of antioxidants such
as vitamins C (2 mg/day) and E (1,000 IU/day), as well as dietary fish oil (2
g/day) rich in omega-3 free fatty acids increased minimal erythema dose.
The
effect of fish oil on UV-induced inflammation may be partially explained by its
ability to reduce prostaglandin E2 levels.41 Polyphenol
provided by the ingestion of high flavanol cocoa (326 mg/day) reduced
UV-induced erythema.
Polypodium leucomotos
(7.5 mg/kg body weight), a tropical fern plant used traditionally in Central
America for the treatment of anti-inflammatory disorders, has also been shown
to counteract the erythematogenic effect of UV exposure.
Finally
a specific association of a probiotic (Lactobacillus
johnsonii, La1) with carotenoids (β-carotene:
4.8 mg/day; lycopene: 2 mg) was also shown to increase minimal erythema dose.
UV
exposure can lead to both direct and indirect DNA damage. The major direct DNA
damage is the release of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (thymine dimers and 6–4
photoproducts). Placzek M et al.
have
shown that the oral administration of vitamins C (2 mg/day) and E (1,000
IU/day) during 3 months had a protective effect against UV-induced thymine
dimers.
UV exposure also causes local
and systemic immunosuppression, and several mechanisms are involved in this
deleterious effect, among which UV-induced depletion of Langerhans cells (LC),
the major antigen presenting cells in the skin.
A
placebo controlled study demonstrated that β-carotene
(30 mg/j) protects against photo-immunosuppression. Oral administration of Polypodium leucomotos (1,080 mg) prior
to UV exposure seemed to protect CD1a+ cell density and to preserve
the dendricity of immune cells.
More
recently, oral supplementation with the probiotic strain Lactobacillus johnsonii has been shown to accelerate the recovery
of human skin immune homeostasis after UV-induced immunosuppression.
This
specific strain associated with carotenoids (β-carotene: 4.8 mg/day; lycopene: 2 mg) was also able to counteract
UV-induced decrease of LC density in human volunteers.
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