GUT SKIN
- Anti-Aging Effects of Probiotics – PubMed (nih.gov)
- Natural antioxidants.
- Clinical evidence of benefits of a dietary supplement containing probiotic and carotenoids on ultraviolet-induced skin damage.
- Probiotics in Cosmetic and Personal Care Products: Trends and Challenges.
- Topical Probiotics in Dermatological Therapy and Skincare: A Concise Review.
- Enhancement of the Anti-Skin Wrinkling Effects of Aloe arborescens Miller Extracts Associated with Lactic Acid Fermentation.
- Anti-Photoaging Effect of Plant Extract Fermented with Lactobacillus buchneri on CCD-986sk Fibroblasts and HaCaT Keratinocytes.
- Yeast as a tool to identify anti-aging compounds – PubMed (nih.gov)
GUT- BRAIN -AXIS
- Topical Probiotics in Dermatological Therapy and Skincare: A Concise Review
- Wound Healing Treatments After Ablative Laser Skin Resurfacing: A Review
- Probiotic Activity of Staphylococcus epidermidis Induces Collagen Type I Production through FFaR2/p-ERK Signaling
- Acne vulgaris, probiotics and the gut-brain-skin axis – back to the future? | Gut Pathogens | Full Text (biomedcentral.com)
- Topical Probiotics in Dermatological Therapy and Skincare: A Concise Review.
- Changing our microbiome: probiotics in dermatology.
- The role of topical probiotics in skin conditions: A systematic review of animal and human studies and implications for future therapies.
- The Skin and Gut Microbiome and Its Role in Common Dermatologic Conditions.
- Gut-Skin Axis: Current Knowledge of the Interrelationship between Microbial Dysbiosis and Skin Conditions.
- Probiotics in the Therapeutic Arsenal of Dermatologists.
- Targeting the gut-skin axis-Probiotics as new tools for skin disorder management?
- Probiotics, Prebiotics, and Synbiotics for the Treatment and Prevention of Adult Dermatological Diseases.
- The role of topical probiotics on wound healing: A review of animal and human studies.
INFLAMMAGING
- Inflammaging: a new immune-metabolic viewpoint for age-related diseases.
- Chronic inflammation (inflammaging) and its potential contribution to age-associated diseases.
- Inflammaging and ‘Garb-aging’.
- Human Inflammaging.
- Inflammaging and Anti-Inflammaging: The Role of Cytokines in Extreme Longevity.
- The integration of inflammaging in age-related diseases.
- Inflammaging and Oxidative Stress in Human Diseases: From Molecular Mechanisms to Novel Treatments.
- Tryptophan Metabolism in Inflammaging: From Biomarker to Therapeutic Target.
- Inflammaging and the Skin.
- Inflammaging, hormesis and the rationale for anti-aging strategies.