Scientists have discovered new promising anti -aging powers in a common domestic plant and arrives just in time to combat the summer sun.
A new study has revealed that Aloe Vera sacrifices “exceptional anti -aging effects” and could help treat and prevent skin disease.
It was discovered that the partners extracted from the succulent spiny green avoided the aging of the skin, protect it from sun damage and help in tissue repair, according to a report published this month at the International Journal of Medicine.
“The objective is to provide new interventions for the development of profitable anti -aging treatments and skin insurance, while establishing the basis for exploring other nanoparticles derived from plants for therapeutic and medication administration”, in the thyrentist of Jiangs.
They set out to explore plants -based therapy as an alternative to the care of synthetic skin and derived from voice cells, which can cause advertising, irritation and trigger the immune response.
Other studies have explored anti -inflammatory, antioxidant and healing of Aloe wounds, the group said, but not the extraction of small particles for anti -aging.
Herbal is used worldwide for food and medicine, and is known as “universal medicine” and a “natural aestheticist”, the scientists said in their report.
“We thoroughly evaluate its anti-Kin photographic capacity for the first time in vivo and in vitro models and investigate its possible mechanisms of action,” the research team wrote, referring to the tests on animals and Petri plates.
Among their findings, the researchers said they discovered that the dermis with aloe can be pretatized can inhibit the production of aged cells and prevent skin damage that causes rough and dry meat, depending on wrinkles and, in more serious cases, tumors and cancers.
As part of their experiment, the scientists divided 36 7 -week female mice and applied gel nanoparticles and the outer cortex of the aloe plant behind the shaved back of some and exposed them to different levels of UV radiation.
It was discovered that the shell, which was previously seen as a waste by-product of the popular solar burns ointment, had “significant medicinal value in the field of tissue repair”, overcoming the gel in terms of “anti-adn damage” and against free radicals.
“This study establishes a theoretical basis for the development of natural and safe anti-photocotrix formatations, which is expected to have considerable potential in the Functional Products and Dermatology of Skin Care in the future,” the report concluded.
Despite the need for clinical trials and protocols to properly prepare the plant, which has 550 different species, they said they firmly believed in the potential it has in the “prevention and treatment of skin clinical diseases, the field of the medical AEST.”