Nanoemulsions: A review on the conceptualization of treatment for psoriasis using a `green' surfactant with low-energy emulsification method

Psoriasis is a skin disease that is not lethal and does not spread through bodily contact. However, this seemingly harmless condition can lead to a loss of confidence and social stigmatization due to a persons' flawed appearance. The conventional methods of psoriasis treatment include taking in...

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Main Authors: Dinshaw, Ignatius Julian, Ahmad, Noraini, Salim, Norazlinaliza, Leo, Bey Fen
Format: Article
Published: MDPI 2021
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/26574/
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spelling my.um.eprints.265742022-03-21T03:05:25Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/26574/ Nanoemulsions: A review on the conceptualization of treatment for psoriasis using a `green' surfactant with low-energy emulsification method Dinshaw, Ignatius Julian Ahmad, Noraini Salim, Norazlinaliza Leo, Bey Fen QD Chemistry RM Therapeutics. Pharmacology Psoriasis is a skin disease that is not lethal and does not spread through bodily contact. However, this seemingly harmless condition can lead to a loss of confidence and social stigmatization due to a persons' flawed appearance. The conventional methods of psoriasis treatment include taking in systemic drugs to inhibit immunoresponses within the body or applying topical drugs onto the surface of the skin to inhibit cell proliferation. Topical methods are favored as they pose lesser side effects compared to the systemic methods. However, the side effects from systemic drugs and low bioavailability of topical drugs are the limitations to the treatment. The use of nanotechnology in this field has enhanced drug loading capacity and reduced dosage size. In this review, biosurfactants were introduced as a `greener' alternative to their synthetic counterparts. Glycolipid biosurfactants are specifically suited for anti-psoriatic application due to their characteristic skin-enhancing qualities. The selection of a suitable oil phase can also contribute to the anti-psoriatic effect as some oils have skin-healing properties. The review covers the pathogenic pathway of psoriasis, conventional treatments, and prospective ingredients to be used as components in the nanoemulsion formulation. Furthermore, an insight into the state-of-the-art methods used in formulating nanoemulsions and their progression to low-energy methods are also elaborated in detail. MDPI 2021-07 Article PeerReviewed Dinshaw, Ignatius Julian and Ahmad, Noraini and Salim, Norazlinaliza and Leo, Bey Fen (2021) Nanoemulsions: A review on the conceptualization of treatment for psoriasis using a `green' surfactant with low-energy emulsification method. Pharmaceutics, 13 (7). ISSN 1999-4923, DOI https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics13071024 <https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics13071024>. 10.3390/pharmaceutics13071024
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic QD Chemistry
RM Therapeutics. Pharmacology
spellingShingle QD Chemistry
RM Therapeutics. Pharmacology
Dinshaw, Ignatius Julian
Ahmad, Noraini
Salim, Norazlinaliza
Leo, Bey Fen
Nanoemulsions: A review on the conceptualization of treatment for psoriasis using a `green' surfactant with low-energy emulsification method
description Psoriasis is a skin disease that is not lethal and does not spread through bodily contact. However, this seemingly harmless condition can lead to a loss of confidence and social stigmatization due to a persons' flawed appearance. The conventional methods of psoriasis treatment include taking in systemic drugs to inhibit immunoresponses within the body or applying topical drugs onto the surface of the skin to inhibit cell proliferation. Topical methods are favored as they pose lesser side effects compared to the systemic methods. However, the side effects from systemic drugs and low bioavailability of topical drugs are the limitations to the treatment. The use of nanotechnology in this field has enhanced drug loading capacity and reduced dosage size. In this review, biosurfactants were introduced as a `greener' alternative to their synthetic counterparts. Glycolipid biosurfactants are specifically suited for anti-psoriatic application due to their characteristic skin-enhancing qualities. The selection of a suitable oil phase can also contribute to the anti-psoriatic effect as some oils have skin-healing properties. The review covers the pathogenic pathway of psoriasis, conventional treatments, and prospective ingredients to be used as components in the nanoemulsion formulation. Furthermore, an insight into the state-of-the-art methods used in formulating nanoemulsions and their progression to low-energy methods are also elaborated in detail.
format Article
author Dinshaw, Ignatius Julian
Ahmad, Noraini
Salim, Norazlinaliza
Leo, Bey Fen
author_facet Dinshaw, Ignatius Julian
Ahmad, Noraini
Salim, Norazlinaliza
Leo, Bey Fen
author_sort Dinshaw, Ignatius Julian
title Nanoemulsions: A review on the conceptualization of treatment for psoriasis using a `green' surfactant with low-energy emulsification method
title_short Nanoemulsions: A review on the conceptualization of treatment for psoriasis using a `green' surfactant with low-energy emulsification method
title_full Nanoemulsions: A review on the conceptualization of treatment for psoriasis using a `green' surfactant with low-energy emulsification method
title_fullStr Nanoemulsions: A review on the conceptualization of treatment for psoriasis using a `green' surfactant with low-energy emulsification method
title_full_unstemmed Nanoemulsions: A review on the conceptualization of treatment for psoriasis using a `green' surfactant with low-energy emulsification method
title_sort nanoemulsions: a review on the conceptualization of treatment for psoriasis using a `green' surfactant with low-energy emulsification method
publisher MDPI
publishDate 2021
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/26574/
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