BEIJING, Feb. 26 (Xinhuanet) -- A topical treatment
made from black pepper could help alleviate a disfiguring skin condition that
affects about 1 percent of the world's population, British researchers report.
A team at King's College London showed in a study of
mice that piperine ¡ª the compound that gives black pepper its spicy, pungent
flavor ¡ª and its synthetic derivatives helped stimulate pigmentation in the skin
of people with vitiligo.
Piperine was particularly effective when combined
with phototherapy treatment using ultraviolet radiation, the researchers said in
a study to be published in the British Journal of Dermatology.
"We have shown that topical treatment with piperine
stimulates even pigmentation in the skin," Antony Young, a photobiologist at
King's College who worked on the study, said in a statement.
The disease, to which pop star Michael Jackson has in
the past attributed his gradual skin whitening, destroys the melanin which gives
skin its color. Melanin protects from ultraviolet rays so victims run a much
higher risk of skin cancer.
Vitiligo is of particular concern in people with
darker skins, the researchers said.
Current treatments include steroids applied to patchy
skin and phototherapy. But many people do not respond to hormones and
phototherapy can raise the risk of skin cancer, the researchers said.
The team compared the effects of piperine and its
derivatives when applied to the skin of mice either alone or followed by
radiation treatment. They found that when used alone the compounds stimulated
pigmentation to an even, light brown color within six weeks. When boosted by
radiation, the treatment led to even darker skin in about the same period of
time.
(Agencies)