In the study below, sweet almond oil, jojoba oil and paraffin oil were tested for penetration and moisturizing effects (occlusion). All three penetrated the outermost layer of the skin (SC= stratum corneum) and all three provided moderate occlusion (petrolatum as a control provided strong occlusion).
The oils were semi-occlusive, whereas petrolatum was very occlusive. Semi occlusive substances are ideal for moisturizing. (Rosehip oil is also useful in that way).
Lipid uptake and skin occlusion following topical application of oils on adult and infant skin:
Georgios N. Stamatas, Johanna de Sterke, Matthias Hauser, Otto von Stetten, André van der Pol
Summary
Background
Topical application of oils and oil-based formulations is common practice in skin care for both adults and infants. Only limited knowledge however is available regarding skin penetration and occlusive potential of oils and common methods for measuring skin moisturization fall short when it comes to the moisturizing effect of oils.
Objective
In this study we used in vivo confocal Raman microspectroscopy to test the efficacy of paraffin oil (mineral oil) and two vegetable oils in terms of skin penetration and occlusion. Petrolatum was used as a positive control.
Methods
The products were applied topically on the forearms of nine volunteers and seven infants and Raman spectra were acquired before and at 30 and 90 min following application. Depth concentration profiles for lipid and water were calculated from the Raman spectra. Skin occlusion was assessed from the amount of stratum corneum (SC) swelling measured from the water concentration profiles.
Results
The paraffin oil and the vegetable oils penetrate the top layers of the SC with similar concentration profiles, a result that was confirmed both for adult and infant skin. The three oils tested demonstrated modest SC swelling (10–20%) compared to moderate swelling (40–60%) for petrolatum.
Conclusion
These data indicate that there is no statistical difference between the paraffin oil and vegetable oils in terms of skin penetration and skin occlusion. The results for petrolatum show that in vivo confocal Raman microspectroscopy is sensitive and specific enough to measure both lipid uptake and skin occlusion events following topical application.