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Tagged: acne, dandruff, facewash, salicylic acid, shampoo
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Does salicylic acid from facewash or shampoo need cationic polymer as deposition aid to do its job?
Posted by Abdullah on May 31, 2022 at 2:59 amIf we use 2-3% salicylic acid in facewash or shampoo for anti acne and anti dandruff purpose, should we use a cationic polymer as deposition aid with it or it doesn’t need to deposit to do it’s job?
Abdullah replied 2 years, 5 months ago 7 Members · 18 Replies -
18 Replies
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In a rinse-off product, it doesn’t do any job other than marketing. Whatever you do, it will simply be flushed down the drain.
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The average contact time of a surfactant-based face wash is 20 seconds prior to rinsing. Unless the active has an impact within that 20 second time frame, it generally will not have much of an effect. Placebo effect.
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I’m a bit skeptical benzoyl peroxide does much from a rinse off product. It is not soluble in water so it likely will just get washed away like all the other oily materials.
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@Perry @MarkBroussard @Pharma so what about OTC benzoyl peroxide cleansers and salicylic acid cleansers and soap’s?
Can a product that doesn’t do any benefit except just being a cleanser be called and registered as an OTC drug?
If salicylic acid from an OTC cleanser or soap is not doing anything then it is just a cleanser or soap called OTC with doing nothing, right? -
Yes, any cleanser containing 2% SA and making Acne claims under the FDA monograph would be an OTC. That is primarily for marketing purposes so you can market it as an Acne OTC product.
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Products with benzoyl peroxide need to be left on for at least 1-2 minutes, other rinse-off products for example with fungicides require up to 5 minutes (of freezing you butt off in the showers)…
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MarkBroussard said:@abdullah:
Yes, any cleanser containing 2% SA and making Acne claims under the FDA monograph would be an OTC. That is primarily for marketing purposes so you can market it as an Acne OTC product.
Thanks a lot
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People with acne will normally use a suite of products, including leave-on products which is where they get the benefit, from the leave-on products, not the cleansers. But, adding SA to a cleanser certainly will not hurt, it just won’t do very much in terms of effectiveness in delivering an active against acne.
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MarkBroussard said:@Abdullah
People with acne will normally use a suite of products, including leave-on products which is where they get the benefit, from the leave-on products, not the cleansers. But, adding SA to a cleanser certainly will not hurt, it just won’t do very much in terms of effectiveness in delivering an active against acne.
That makes sense
Thanks a lot -
MarkBroussard said:@abdullah:
The average contact time of a surfactant-based face wash is 20 seconds prior to rinsing. Unless the active has an impact within that 20 second time frame, it generally will not have much of an effect. Placebo effect.
If contact time is increased to 30-60 second with rubbing, will it beneficial?
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@amitvedakar - I doubt it. The surfactants are emulsifying oils so most of the salicylic acid will be tied up in a micelle & not in contact with skin.
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Perry said:@amitvedakar - I doubt it. The surfactants are emulsifying oils so most of the salicylic acid will be tied up in a micelle & not in contact with skin.
Can’t polymer help salicylic acid deposition the same way it does help silicone deposition?
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In order for SA to be effecive in an acne product, the SA needs to actually penetrate into the hair follicle. That simply is highly unlikely to happen in a cleanser.
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MarkBroussard said:@Abdullah
In order for SA to be effecive in an acne product, the SA needs to actually penetrate into the hair follicle. That simply is highly unlikely to happen in a cleanser.
Got it
Thanks
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