Retinyl Linoleate

Goed

Antioxidant

Retinyl Linoleate at a glance

  • A member of the retinoid family
  • Ester of retinol and linoleic acid
  • Helps encourage cell turnover
  • Works to decrease visible signs of aging
  • Safeguards skin from pro-aging external agents

Retinyl Linoleate description

Retinyl linoleate is an oil-soluble member of the retinoid family (so it’s considered a vitamin A derivative). It functions as a skin-conditioning ingredient that works to combat visible signs of aging, encourage an even tone and promote healthy skin through increased cell turnover. Chemically, it’s an ester of retinol and linoleic acid, an unsaturated omega-6 fatty acid, which makes it a milder, gentler retinoid that helps promote hydration. As such, it’s less potent than many of its retinoid counterparts. As a retinoid, it coaches skin to act like it did when it was younger, which in turn results in fewer visible wrinkles and fine lines and promotes brightness, as well as a perceived increase in skin firmness. Beyond this, retinyl linoleate also functions as an antioxidant, where it helps safeguard skin against pro-aging and pro-damaging external aggressors, like UV rays and pollution. Although a member of the retinoid family, this vitamin A derivative isn’t as effective as other retinoids, like retinal (AKA retinaldehyde). This is because retinyl linoleate requires more conversions (three, to be exact) to become retinoic acid, the form of vitamin A that skin “accepts” and can utilize. The more conversions a retinoid requires to become retinoic acid, the less potent, but gentler, it becomes. Retinoids are a group of well-researched ingredients, however, retinyl linoleate lacks abundant, peer-reviewed research as an individual ingredient. For best results, look for this derivative paired with retinol-like ingredients such as bakuchiol or skin-firming peptides. Suppliers of this ingredient relay that it’s a yellow-to-brown liquid as a raw material and is more stable than retinol. In 2013, the Cosmetic Ingredient Review Expert Panel reported that retinyl linoleate was used in percentages between 0.01%-0.3%.

Retinyl Linoleate references

  • UL Prospector, Webpage, Accessed November 2024
  • Pharmaceutics, January 2020, ePublication
  • Journal of Investigative Dermatology, September 2019, Page S244

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.