AI Article Synopsis

  • Plant-derived secondary metabolites and microbial exometabolites from fermented tropical fruits have been shown to improve skin and hair health through various mechanisms like wound healing and antioxidant effects.
  • A clinical trial investigated the effectiveness of hair care products containing fermented papaya, fermented mangosteen, and caffeine on hair quality in individuals with hair loss over three months.
  • Results indicated that the products significantly reduced hair loss, increased density and thickness, and improved overall hair follicle structure compared to placebo and caffeine-only controls.

Article Abstract

Plant-derived secondary metabolites (polyphenols/terpenes/alkaloids) and microbial exometabolites/membrane components of fermented tropical fruits are known as highly bioavailable biomolecules causing skin and hair improvement effects (wound healing, anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, antidiabetic, antiacne, skin/hair microbiota balancing, hair growth-promoting, and hair loss-inhibiting). Caffein is considered as a hair growth promoter. A randomized placebo- and caffein-controlled clinical trial on the efficacy of fermented papaya (FP) plus fermented mangosteen (FM) towards human hair quality and loss was conducted. Shampoo and lotion hair care products containing FP, FM, and caffein as active agents were developed and applied to 154 subjects of both sexes with clinically confirmed androgenic or diffuse alopecia for 3 months. Their clinical efficacy was assessed subjectively by questionnaires filled in by dermatologists/trichologists, and by the objective trichomicroscopical calculations. Hair and scalp skin quality was determined by microbiota pattern and ATP, SH-groups, protein, and malonyl dialdehyde quantification. Comparative clinical data showed that the experimental hair care cosmetics significantly inhibited hair loss, increased hair density/thickness, and improved hair follicle structure versus placebo and caffein controls. The cosmetics with FP and FM substantially normalized the microbiota pattern and increased ATP content in hair follicle, while inhibiting lipid peroxidation in the scalp skin, and SH-group formation in the hair shaft.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10136211PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biom13040699DOI Listing

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