A comparison of techniques for the measurement of transepidermal water loss
- 1 January 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Archives of Dermatological Research
- Vol. 274 (1-2) , 57-64
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00510358
Abstract
An Evaporimeter and a ventilated chamber technique have been compared in their ability to measure transepidermal water loss (TEWL) through rat skin. These techniques measure TEWL under very different conditions; the Evaporimeter measures the net TEWL under ambient relative humidity (RH) whereas the ventilated chamber employs a constant atmosphere, usually of low RH and thus measured the uni-directional diffusion of water. Paired Evaporimeter and ventilated chamber measurements were made of TEWL through normal skin and through skin whose barrier properties had been altered by tape-stripping (15 applications) or single applications of n-hexadecane (28.4 μmol cm−2). Both measuring techniques indicated the same level of TEWL through normal skin (mean 0.3 mg cm−2 h−1) and during increases in TEWL induced by n-hexadecane (max TEWL c 3.5 mg cm−2 h−1). However, the Evaporimeter was found to underestimate the higher rates of TEWL induced by tape-stripping, ie above TEWL rates of 7.5 mg cm−2 h−1. The Evaporimeter is portable, easy to use and suitable for measurements of net water loss up to 7.5 mg cm−2 h−1; it can only be used for comparative assessments of epidermal barrier function if used at a particular ambient RH. The more cumbersome ventilated chamber is to be preferred for accurate assessments of barrier function where high rates of TEWL occur.This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
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