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Eczema Bible
Christina Nevada Sands, Author and Counselor

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Ceramides and Programmed Cell Death

I'm not promoting TriCeram by Osmotics or EpiCeram by Ceragenix ... not because they cost and arm and a leg, but because they are just trying to do the job of sebum and we know your own sebum is better. We also know that putting oils on your skin causes your skin to produce less oils. Dr. Peter Elias, M.D., Professor of Dermatology at the University of California, San Francisco and Ceragenix' Chief Scientific Officer has even published on this very phenomenon. He discovered that the skin works as a bio sensor and actually perceives that an occlusive film barrier downregulates the production of barrier lipids so that once the cream is gone, you are left with dry skin ... but I'm sure they don't advertise that.

Ceragenix/EpiCeram does, however, advertise that people with atopic dermatitis have decreased ceramides. They themselves even told me that staph makes an enzyme that feeds on ceramides. So, why not just control staph, build and protect your own sebum, and increase glutamine instead for cellular proliferation and lipogenesis by human sebaceous glands. (Sebum is produced when the sebaceous gland disintegrates.) Note that sebum is antimicrobial, which is another one of EpiCeram's boasts about ceramides.

Research seems to point towards avoiding ceramide accumulation anyway ...


LINKS

Ceramide in bacterial infections and cystic fibrosis.

Department of Molecular Biology, University of Duisburg-Essen, Hufelandstrasse 55, D-45122 Essen, Germany.

Ceramide is formed by the activity of sphingomyelinases, by degradation of complex sphingolipids, reverse ceramidase activity or de novo synthesized. The formation of ceramide within biological membranes results in the formation of large ceramide-enriched membrane domains. These domains serve the spatial and temporal organization of receptors and signaling molecules. The acid sphingomyelinase-ceramide system plays an important role in the infection of mammalian host cells with bacterial pathogens such as Neisseria gonorrhoeae, Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aureus, Listeria monocytogenes, Salmonella typhimurium and Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Ceramide and ceramide-enriched membrane platforms are also involved in the induction of apoptosis in infected cells, such as in epithelial and endothelial cells after infection with Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Staphylococcus aureus, respectively. Finally, ceramide-enriched membrane platforms are critical regulators of the release of pro-inflammatory cytokines upon infection. The diverse functions of ceramide in bacterial infections suggest that ceramide and ceramide-enriched membrane domains are key players in host responses to many pathogens and thus are potential novel targets to treat infections. PMID: 18783339 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

Activation of bacterial ceramidase by anionic glycerophospholipids: possible involvement in ceramide hydrolysis on atopic skin by Pseudomonas ceramidase.

Since both P. aeruginosa and S. aureus (staph) are suspected of being present in microflora of atopic skin, we speculate that S. aureus-derived glycerophospholipids stimulate the hydrolysis of Ceramide in atopic skin by bacterial ceramidase.http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1222425/

See: Proliferation of Sebaceous Glands for Sebum

       

 

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