Development of Poly Herbal Cream Formulations Containing Wild Growing Omani Medicinal Plants

Halligudi, Nirmala and Al-Habsi, Hanan Obaid and Sreenath, Lakshmi and Bhupathyraaj, Mullaicharam (2021) Development of Poly Herbal Cream Formulations Containing Wild Growing Omani Medicinal Plants. Asian Journal of Applied Chemistry Research, 10 (1). pp. 57-65. ISSN 2582-0273

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Abstract

Acne is derived from the Greek word “acme” which means “prime of life”. It is mostly considered to be benign and self-limiting condition but if it is ignored than it can progress to lifetime presence and scaring of the skin. Almost 85% of adolescence are affected by acne and from here males are at higher ration that female due to testosterone level that causes increase size in sebaceous gland which in turn causes more production of sebum (oil production). Women are affected more during adulthood due to imbalance of premenstrual hormones and over use of oil based cosmetics. There are many different factors that contribute to acne formation and it has many different forms. Herbal medication are considered safer than allopathic medicines because allopathic medicines are associated with various side effects such as like contact allergy, local irritation, scaling, photosensitivity, itching, redness, skin peeling, necrosis of the skin etc. In this study there are 3 herbal plants were used to prepare cream formulation that were used to investigate the anti-acne property. The aim of this research work was to develop formulations and to perform its evaluation as an herbal anti-acne cream. The objective of this study was to focus on the ant-acne or anti-bacterial effect of the formulated polyherbal cream containing three plants, Thyme, Aloe Vera and Basil. The results showed that the formulation 10 showed potential anti-acne property had that twice more concentration of aloe Vera than basil and thyme.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: e-Archives > Chemical Science
Depositing User: Managing Editor
Date Deposited: 25 Oct 2022 12:02
Last Modified: 07 May 2024 05:07
URI: http://ebooks.abclibraries.com/id/eprint/11

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