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To evaluate the protective effect of three Laboratoire VICHY formulations on the pigmentation caused by visible light in comparison to a non-treated control zone in healthy volunteers
Full description
The sunscreens usually used as photoprotectors are known to protect in the UV domain (UVB and UVA). However, until recently visible light (400-700 nm) was considered as devoid of any photobiological effects on cutaneous tissue. Over the last two decades, with the development of photodynamic therapies and various dermatological treatments using visible laser light, several studies have reconsidered the cutaneous effect of visible light on the skin, in particular the induction of pigmentation.
The aim of this study was to assess the ability of sunscreens with a protective efficacy in the UV domain to prevent the pigmentation induced by Visible Light.
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Woman who was pregnant or lactating or who planned to become pregnant during the study period,
Subject having an underlying pathology, or a surgical, physical or medical status which, according to the investigator, could interfere with the interpretation of the study results, such as:
Subject having been exposed excessively to ultraviolet light (UV) either natural (sun) or artificial (tanning salon) during the 4 weeks before the screening visit or who planned to expose himself/herself during the study,
Subject having antecedent or current pathologies induced or aggravated by exposure to light or having abnormal reactions to sunlight (e.g. photosensitive dermatitis, polymorphous light eruption, solar urticaria, systemic lupus erythematosus, dermatomyositis),
Subject having taken a systemic treatment of more than 5 days during the month preceding inclusion (steroids, non-steroidal anti-inflammatories including aspirin, insulin, anti-histamines, anti-hypertensive drugs, antibiotics such as quinolones, tetracyclines, thiazides and fluoroquinolones, and all photosensitising treatments) or any other treatment capable of inducing an abnormal response to UV or visible light (vitamin A derivatives, psoralen, aminolevulinic acid derivatives...) or who planned to take these treatments during the study,
Subject who had applied a local treatment on the back for more than 2 days during the 2 weeks preceding inclusion (steroids, non-steroidal anti-inflammatories,, anti-histamines, antibiotics) and any cosmetic products in the 24 hours preceding inclusion,
Subject with clinically significant allergic antecedents, particularly to components of the test products
Person requiring enhanced protection (person deprived of liberty, minor, placed under guardianship),
Subject being in a situation which, according to the opinion of the Investigator, would have interfered with an optimal participation in the study
Subject participating in, or having participated in, another clinical study during the month preceding inclusion,
Subject unable to communicate effectively with the investigator or not able to follow the study imperatives.
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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