Researchers at King's College London have found that a key component in black pepper, known as piperine, can help in developing new treatments for curing Vitiligo.
Researchers at King's College London have found that a key component in black pepper, known as piperine, can help in developing new treatments for curing Vitiligo skin disease.
Vitiligo is a chronic skin disease that causes loss of normal pigment, resulting in white patches on the skin.The current treatments used for alleviating the disease include corticosteroids applied to the skin, and phototherapy using UV radiation (UVR) to re-pigment the skin.
The team of researchers conducted the study using a mice model.
They applied the piperine and its synthetic derivatives on the skin of mice either alone or followed by UVR.
The findings revealed that piperine and two of its derivatives, when used alone, stimulated pigmentation to an even, light brown colour within six weeks.
It stimulates the production of the skin's pigment cells, called melanocytes.
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"Combining this with UVR significantly enhances the pigmentation with results that are cosmetically better than conventional vitiligo therapies," he added.
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"These findings could potentially lead to the development of treatments that not only provide improved results, but could also reduce the need for UV radiation in vitiligo treatment, in turn lowering the risk of skin cancer," she said.
The study appears in the British Journal of Dermatology.
Source-ANI
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