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Aging News & Information
Women's Skin Ages Faster than Men's, Says New Test
to Measure Skin Aging
October 3, 2006 - Physicists and medical
researchers for the first time have demonstrated a new technique that
non-invasively measures in real time the level of damage to the skin
from sun exposure and aging, and initial results suggest that womens
skin ages faster than mens.
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Aging News & Information |
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This new laser-based technique images the fabric of
the deeper layers of the skin, combining methods for imaging collagen
and elastin, whose degeneration causes the appearance of wrinkles and
the progressive loss of skin smoothness.
The technique measures relative amounts of collagen
and elastin by a single factor, which can be positive or negative, like
temperatures. Higher values of the factor correspond to higher collagen
content, and to lower elastin content.
Previously, each of the imaging techniques had only
been tested on tissue extracted from live patients. Last year, Sung-Jan
Lin, of National Taiwan University in Taipei, and collaborators, defined
the collagen/elastin factor and demonstrated that it gave results
consistent with the results of existing lab techniques.
Researchers tested the technique directly on the
forearms of 18 patients, measuring the collagen/elastin factor. The team
was also able to obtain images of tiny swaths -- one-fifth of a
millimeter wide -- of the proteins' fibrous matrices, showing the
physical appearance of the dermis, the white lower-layer of skin that
gets exposed in deep abrasions.
This study by researchers at Friedrich Schiller
University, in Jena, Germany, at the Fraunhofer Institute of Biomedical
Technology, in St. Ingbert, Germany, and at JenLab GmbH, a Jena-based
laser technology company, appears in the October 1 issue of Optics
Letters, a journal of the Optical Society of America.
Large variations appeared from patient to patient,
and even from one part of a patient's forearm to another.
In a healthy 35-year-old, some areas can appear
like the skin of a 25-year-old, and others like that of someone who's
50, said Johannes Koehler, a dermatologist at Friedrich Schiller
University and a coauthor of the Optics Letters paper.
But on average, both the collagen/elastin factor
and the physical appearance of the network showed a clear dependence on
the patients' age. The dependence appeared to be sex-dependent, with
women's skin losing collagen at faster rates than men's.
The two methods combined in the imaging technique
use the ability of ultra-brief pulses of laser infrared light to
stimulate tissues to emit light at shorter wavelengths -- blue in the
case of collagen, and green in the case of elastin.
Since the upper layer of the skin, called the
epidermis, is virtually transparent to infrared light, the infrared
laser can reach the dermis with intense pulses of light without damaging
the upper layers. By two different quantum processes, collagen and
elastin will then respond by glowing blue and green.
Currently, dermatologists who want to check out the
collagen network of a patient's dermis need to remove a sample of tissue
and analyze it in the lab, under a microscope or by other methods. In
particular, it is impossible to monitor variations in the very same spot
as aging progresses.
You would like to measure changes in collagen
content over time, Dr. Koehler said. Moreover, current techniques
provide a qualitative assessment of the state of the matrix, but no
precise measure of the collagen or of the elastin content, which is what
the new technique does, he said.
Although the technique is still at the experimental
stage, the authors hope that someday it could become useful in studying
skin diseases that affect the collagen structure. Those include
scleroderma, a poorly understood disease characterized by excessive
deposits of collagen in the skin, and some chronic complications of
graft-versus-host disease, which occur when the tissues of bone marrow
transplant patients are attacked by immune cells coming from the donor.
Perhaps the technique could help monitor the
progress of the disease, or the success of a treatment, Dr. Koehler
said. Testing the effectiveness of anti-aging cosmetic products could
also become easier. Some cosmetics are thought to change the content of
collagen in the skin, Dr. Koehler said, but until now, to measure that
you had to cut out a piece of skin.
Notes: Paper: In vivo assessment of human
skin aging by multiphoton laser scanning tomography, by Martin Johannes
Koehler, Karsten Kφnig, Peter Elsner, Rainer Bόckle, and Martin Kaatz,
Optics Letters, Vol. 31, Issue 19, pp. 2879-2881.
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