Atopic Dermatitis: a Short Summary
- Royal-jelly is a yellowish material secreted from the hypopharyngeal and mandibular glands of worker honeybees.
- It has been shown to have a protective effect on dry skin (epidermal hydration)
- In this study, dietary (oral) supplementation was given:
- Total of 47 subjects (mean age: 41.3 years old +/- 6.2)
- capsules of 520mg taken once a day for 10 weeks
- 3 groups consisting of:
- freeze-dried (lyophilized) recipients (17 subjects)
- tablets “removed of allergy proteins” (with proteolytic enzymes) (16 subjects)
- controls (15 subjects) (capsules only containing maltodextrin)
- Results:
- significantly improved results in the 2 groups when compared with the control group for epidermal hydration.
- The epidermal lipid ceramide (Cer) was higher in the allergy-free Royal Jelly treated group.
- However no differences were found in the other epidermal barrier lipids such as free fatty acid and cholesterol
Conclusion+ improved epidermal hydration and ceramides in allergy-free oral supplementation of royal jelly tablets. It could act by an incresse in levels of total amino acids. (Grant by “Next-Generation BioGreen 21 Program)
Contributors
Dr Christophe Hsu – dermatologist. Geneva, Switzerland
Source of information: Cho Y. Dietary royal jelly improves epidermal hydration with increased levels of ceramides in the epidermis of mid-aged healthy human subjects JSID Annual Meeting (Japanese Society of Investigative Dermatology, 日本研究皮膚科学会) 2014 – Osaka, Japan
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