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Isobornyl acrylate : An impurity in alkyl glucosides

Foti, Caterina ; Romita, Paolo ; Rigano, Luigi ; Zimerson, Erik LU ; Sicilia, Mattia ; Ballini, Andrea ; Ghizzoni, Oscar ; Antelmi, Annarita LU ; Angelini, Gianni and Bonamonte, Domenico , et al. (2016) In Cutaneous and Ocular Toxicology 35(2). p.115-119
Abstract

Context: Alkyl glucosides and alkyl poly-glucosides are widely used as wetting agents, surfactants and emulsifiers in several industrial and cosmetic products. They are known as well-tolerated and are usually added to the primary surfactants in order to reduce the irritating potential of the main foaming agents.Objective: Recently, some authors suggested that allergic contact dermatitis to alkyl glucosides might be more frequent than suspected. On the other hand, the chemical structures of glucosides do not show potentially allergenic chemical groups or strongly polarized structures. The aim of our study is to investigate alkyl glucosides carrying out a detailed chemical analysis on samples of raw materials to identify potentially... (More)

Context: Alkyl glucosides and alkyl poly-glucosides are widely used as wetting agents, surfactants and emulsifiers in several industrial and cosmetic products. They are known as well-tolerated and are usually added to the primary surfactants in order to reduce the irritating potential of the main foaming agents.Objective: Recently, some authors suggested that allergic contact dermatitis to alkyl glucosides might be more frequent than suspected. On the other hand, the chemical structures of glucosides do not show potentially allergenic chemical groups or strongly polarized structures. The aim of our study is to investigate alkyl glucosides carrying out a detailed chemical analysis on samples of raw materials to identify potentially allergenic impurities or by-products contained in commercial samples of alkyl glucosides.Materials and methods: We chemically analyzed samples of cocoyl glucoside, decyl glucoside and lauryl glucoside by three different analytical methods, in order to identify any undesired or polluting substances.Result: In each of the three samples, we detected the presence of isobornyl acrylate. Its approximate content in the tested samples is 500 ng/g of the product.Discussion: Isobornyl acrylate is not used in the synthesis of alkyl glucosides, but as a plasticizer in many plastic materials. It can be easily released to materials flowing over these surfaces when they have high extraction power, as glucosides.Conclusion: Isobornyl acrylate may play a role as hidden allergen, in the form of an impurity collected during the industrial process, explaining some cases of allergic reaction to alkyl glucosides.

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organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Acrylates, Allergic contact dermatitis, Glucosides, Handling impurities, Isobornyl acrylate
in
Cutaneous and Ocular Toxicology
volume
35
issue
2
pages
5 pages
publisher
Taylor & Francis
external identifiers
  • pmid:26095233
  • wos:000372497500006
  • scopus:84961844218
ISSN
1556-9527
DOI
10.3109/15569527.2015.1055495
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
26135405-a39b-4d75-b026-f82375644c44
date added to LUP
2016-07-26 07:08:53
date last changed
2024-03-22 05:37:36
@article{26135405-a39b-4d75-b026-f82375644c44,
  abstract     = {{<p>Context: Alkyl glucosides and alkyl poly-glucosides are widely used as wetting agents, surfactants and emulsifiers in several industrial and cosmetic products. They are known as well-tolerated and are usually added to the primary surfactants in order to reduce the irritating potential of the main foaming agents.Objective: Recently, some authors suggested that allergic contact dermatitis to alkyl glucosides might be more frequent than suspected. On the other hand, the chemical structures of glucosides do not show potentially allergenic chemical groups or strongly polarized structures. The aim of our study is to investigate alkyl glucosides carrying out a detailed chemical analysis on samples of raw materials to identify potentially allergenic impurities or by-products contained in commercial samples of alkyl glucosides.Materials and methods: We chemically analyzed samples of cocoyl glucoside, decyl glucoside and lauryl glucoside by three different analytical methods, in order to identify any undesired or polluting substances.Result: In each of the three samples, we detected the presence of isobornyl acrylate. Its approximate content in the tested samples is 500 ng/g of the product.Discussion: Isobornyl acrylate is not used in the synthesis of alkyl glucosides, but as a plasticizer in many plastic materials. It can be easily released to materials flowing over these surfaces when they have high extraction power, as glucosides.Conclusion: Isobornyl acrylate may play a role as hidden allergen, in the form of an impurity collected during the industrial process, explaining some cases of allergic reaction to alkyl glucosides.</p>}},
  author       = {{Foti, Caterina and Romita, Paolo and Rigano, Luigi and Zimerson, Erik and Sicilia, Mattia and Ballini, Andrea and Ghizzoni, Oscar and Antelmi, Annarita and Angelini, Gianni and Bonamonte, Domenico and Bruze, Magnus}},
  issn         = {{1556-9527}},
  keywords     = {{Acrylates; Allergic contact dermatitis; Glucosides; Handling impurities; Isobornyl acrylate}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{04}},
  number       = {{2}},
  pages        = {{115--119}},
  publisher    = {{Taylor & Francis}},
  series       = {{Cutaneous and Ocular Toxicology}},
  title        = {{Isobornyl acrylate : An impurity in alkyl glucosides}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.3109/15569527.2015.1055495}},
  doi          = {{10.3109/15569527.2015.1055495}},
  volume       = {{35}},
  year         = {{2016}},
}