Paraffin

Goed

Textuurversterker

Paraffin at a glance

  • Saturated white wax derived from petroleum
  • Highly purified for use in cosmetics
  • Emollient properties soften, smooth + help protect skin
  • Helps prevent dry, cracked lips
  • Considered safe as used in cosmetics

Paraffin description

Paraffin is a type of white wax that helps smooth and soften skin as well as provide occlusive properties. It forms a flexible film on skin that prevents moisture loss, which is why you’ll see it in many products meant for dry skin and dry, chapped lips. Derived from petroleum and highly purified for use in cosmetics, paraffin is supplied as a solid (saturated) mixture of hydrocarbons, which are chemicals made up of only hydrogen and carbon (hence, “hydrocarbon”). A broad range of cosmetic ingredients are hydrocarbons, including the alkanes, alkenes, alkynes, natural waxes such as beeswax and plant oils such as those from palm, sunflower and coconut. In no way are any of these dangerous or bad ingredients for skin. Although its starting point is natural, paraffin is considered synthetic due to the processing it undergoes prior to its use in cosmetics. Paraffin is available with various melting points, so formulators can choose the degree to which this happens, a decision that impacts a cosmetic’s texture, spread and wear. Paraffin is considered safe and non-toxic as used in cosmetics, including products such as those for lips where some ingestion is possible. This ingredient has an extraordinarily wide use range, from 0.001%–90% depending on the type of product and its intended purpose. Note: newer research has shown that paraffin isn’t good at restoring skin’s barrier, which makes sense given it sits on skin’s surface due to its large size and, unlike ceramides and cholesterol, isn’t naturally found in skin. Other research on hand eczema has shown paraffin baths (extremely dry hands dipped in warm liquid paraffin) produced a significant improvement in dryness compared with placebo.

Paraffin references

  • Clinical Experiments in Dermatology, June 2022, pages 1,154–1,164
  • Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine, December 2020, pages 1,144–1,150
  • Journal of the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology, November 2019, pages 5–14
  • Toxicology Letters, October 2017, pages 70–78
  • International Journal of Toxicology, November-December 2012, pages 269S–295S

Peer-reviewed, substantiated scientific research is used to assess ingredients in this dictionary. Regulations regarding constraints, permitted concentration levels and availability vary by country and region.

Beoordelingen van ingrediënten

Beste

Bewezen en ondersteund door onafhankelijk onderzoek. Uitstekend actief ingrediënt voor de meeste huidtypen of huidproblemen.

Goed

Noodzakelijk om de textuur, stabiliteit of doordringbaarheid van een formule te verbeteren.

Gemiddeld

Doorgaans niet-irriterend maar kan esthetische, stabiliteits- of andere problemen hebben die het nut ervan beperken.

Slecht

De kans op irritatie is aanwezig. Het risico wordt vergroot als het gecombineerd wordt met andere problematische ingrediënten.

Slechtste

Kan irritatie, ontsteking, droogheid, enz. veroorzaken. Kan in sommige gevallen voordelen bieden, maar over het algemeen is bewezen dat het meer kwaad dan goed doet.

onbekend

We konden dit niet vinden in onze Ingredient Dictionary. We registreren alle ontbrekende ingrediënten en werken ze regelmatig bij.

Geen beoordeling

We hebben dit ingrediënt nog niet beoordeeld omdat we het onderzoek ernaar nog niet hebben bekeken.