[title size=”2″]Scientific and Medical Research[/title]
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Effects of ingesting milk fermented by Lactococcus lactis H61 on skin health in young women: a randomized double-blind study.
September 2014
Full Report Here
As skin lipids contribute to maintaining the skin barrier, H61-fermented milk would provide beneficial effects on skin for young women.
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Effects of probiotics for the treatment of atopic dermatitis: a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials.
August 2014
Full Report Here
The overall result of this meta-analysis suggests that probiotics could be an option for the treatment of AD, especially for moderate to severe atopic dermatitis (AD) in children and adults.
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Probiotics and prebiotics in dermatology
April 2014
Full Report Here
The rapid increase in the medical use of probiotics and prebiotics in recent years has confirmed their excellent safety profile. As immune modulators, they have been used in inflammatory skin conditions, such as atopic dermatitis.
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Could probiotics be the next big thing in acne and rosacea treatments?
February 2014
Full Report Here
Dermatologists encouraged by early research showing link between probiotic use and clearer skin in acne and rosacea patients
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Impact of prebiotics and probiotics on skin health
February 2014
Full Report Here
The pre- and probiotics have the capacity to optimise, maintain and restore the microbiota of the skin in different ways. Topical applications of probiotic bacteria have a direct effect at the site of application by enhancing the skin natural defence barriers. Probiotics as well as resident bacteria can produce antimicrobial peptides that benefit cutaneous immune responses and eliminate pathogens. In cosmetic formulations, prebiotics can be applied to the skin microbiota directly and increase selectively the activity and growth of beneficial ‘normal’ skin microbiota.
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Topical probiotics – new approaches to the maintenance and repair of the skin barrier
January 2014
Full Report Here
She concluded by talking about the further research that should be undertaken, but also looked at the great potential for use on the skin and its possible applications, ranging from wound repair, to barrier strengthening and cosmetic s preparation.
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Bioactives from probiotics for dermal health: functions and benefits
May 2013
Full Report Here
Probiotics have been extensively reviewed for decades, emphasizing on improving general gut health. Recently, more studies showed that probiotics may exert other health-promoting effects beyond gut well-being, attributed to the rise of the gut–brain axis correlations. Some of these new benefits include skin health such as improving atopic eczema, atopic dermatitis, healing of burn and scars, skin-rejuvenating properties and improving skin innate immunity. Increasing evidence has also showed that bacterial compounds such as cell wall fragments, their metabolites and dead bacteria can elicit certain immune responses on the skin and improve skin barrier functions. This review aimed to underline the mechanisms or the exact compounds underlying the benefits of bacterial extract on the skin based on evidences from in vivo and in vitro studies. This review could be of help in screening of probiotic strains with potential dermal enhancing properties for topical applications.
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Randomised double-blind placebo-controlled study of the effect of Lactobacillus paracasei NCC 2461 on skin reactivity
January 2013
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The results of the present clinical trial show that oral supplementation with the probiotic decreases skin sensitivity and increases the rate of barrier function recovery.
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UCLA study could explain why some people get zits and others don’t
February 2013
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In a boon for teenagers everywhere, a UCLA study conducted with researchers at Washington University in St. Louis and the Los Angeles Biomedical Research Institute has discovered that acne bacteria contain “bad” strains associated with pimples and “good” strains that may protect the skin.
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Pre- and Probiotics for Human Skin
January 2012
Full Report Here
Current research on the complex interplay between the microbiota, the barrier function and the innate immune system of the skin indicates that the skin’s microbiota have a beneficial role, much like that of the gut microflora.
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Clinical evidence of benefits of a dietary supplement containing probiotic and carotenoids on ultraviolet-induced skin damage
September 2010
Full Report Here
Nutritional supplementation combining a specific probiotic (La1) and nutritional doses of carotenoids reduced early UV-induced skin damage caused by simulated or natural sun exposure in a large panel of subjects (n = 139). This latter result might suggest that DS intake could have a beneficial influence on the long-term effects of UV exposure and more specifically on skin photoageing.
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Clinical evidence of benefits of a dietary supplement containing probiotic and carotenoids on ultraviolet-induced skin damage
September 2010
Full Report Here
Clinical and experimental researches extensively document that beyond probiotic capacity to influence positively the intestinal functions, they can exert their benefits at the skin level thanks to their peculiar properties.
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Probiotics for preventing eczema
August 2010
Full Report Here
As Dotterud and colleagues have shown, probiotics are our most promising intervention for reducing the burden of eczema via primary prevention
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