View clinical trials related to Healthy Skin.
Filter by:ApolloVue® S100 Image System is a medical device class II. The objective of this protocol is to image skin of healthy volunteers and to evaluate the performance of full-field optical coherence tomography (FF-OCT) device - the ApolloVue® S100 Image System in imaging skin microstructures of healthy skin at different anatomical locations and nevi for different skin types and different age and to evaluate usability of the ApolloVue® S100 Image System.
The main aim of this study is to investigate in a suction blister model, whether the use of a basic skin care formulation increases the mechanical integrity/adhesion of the dermo-epidermal junction.
Up to 10 volunteers will be recruited to evaluate the microbial environment on their forearms. Following informed consent, bacterial swabs will be obtained at baseline from the forearms of all subjects. Their forearms will then be washed with one of the study cleansers. Subjects will then have their forearms swabbed for bacteria at the following time points: 10 minutes, 6 hours, and 24 hours after the wash. DNA will be extracted from all swabs and bacterial diversity evaluated by 16S pyrosequencing.
The investigators want to study if nanoparticles of titaniumdioxide are penetrating skin when the skin is intact and when the skin is sunburned. The hypothesis is "Does nanotitandioxide penetrate intact or sunburned skin?"
This is a single-center study, randomized, Investigator/Evaluator-blinded bilateral (split-face) comparison. The objective: To assess the benefit of the concomitant use of a Moisturizing Lotion in reducing the skin irritation induced by a adapalen gel treatment in Chinese Subjects.
This research project aims to study the effects of microdermabrasion, a technique causing minimal injury used to improve the appearance of fine lines, wrinkles, and scars. Subjects will undergo microdermabrasion, which is a gentle "sand-blasting" of the skin. We are interested in determining how this procedure works at rebuilding the skin following microdermabrasion.