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"Instant " damage cells
NEW YORK, Apr 19 (Reuters) A chemical used in making cosmetic products promising an ''instant '' makes wrinkles disappear by damaging skin cells, Canadian researchers report.
''From our point of view the cells are altered. They stop dividing, they stop secreting, and after...24 hours a certain proportion of them die,'' Dr Francois Marceau of the Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Quebec told Reuters Health.
Marceau, a cell biologist, said he is reluctant to recomamend that these products not be used, however, the findings make it clear that more research is needed on how these and similar products work.
''I don't want to scare people,'' he added. ''The risk is not probably very big, but in my opinion it hasn't been measured accurately.'' Marceau and his team tested 2-dimethylaminoethanol (DMAE) in cultured rabbit and human skin cells. As the researchers predicted, applying the product caused a massive and rapid swelling of the cells as they filled get with DMAE and water, leading to a thickening of the epidermal layer. They also found that DMAE was toxic to the skin cells, halting cell division, inhibiting secretion, and killing some cells after 24 hours of exposure.
This ''facelift in a jar'' chemical is certainly safer than a real facelift, or Botox injections, Marceau noted. Nevertheless, the fact that DMAE and other ''cosmeceuticals,'' such as triethanolamine, aren't considered drugs means they are sold with very minimal information about how they work and their toxicity.
''We
know
far
less
for
these
chemicals
than
for
any
new
drug
that
has
been
marketed
in
the
last
30
years,''
Marceau
said.
''What
I'd
like
to
see
is
more
science
in
this
field.''
These
chemicals
should
be
treated
as
drugs,
and
many
studies,
such
as
of
mode
of
action
and
toxicology,
should
be
completed
before
it
is
marketed.



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