An extract of a fern plant grown
in Central America, taken by mouth, protects the skin from
ultraviolet radiation damage that can lead to skin cancer,
researchers report.
A sunscreen in a pill might
be more effective than lotions because it would provide total
body surface protection, Dr. Salvador Gonzalez, at Massachusetts
General Hospital in Boston, and his colleagues suggest in
the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology for December.
The group looked into the fern
extract, Polypodium leucotomos, because of its known antioxidative
properties and anti-tumor activity.
The investigators exposed nine
healthy volunteers to varying doses of UV radiation from a
xenon arc lamp over various portions of their back, at 2 to
3 times the dose needed to produce minimal reddening times.
Small skin biopsies were taken
after the first exposure without the participants taking P.
leucotomos, and again after the same procedure when the subjects
were given capsules of P. leucotomos.
After the plant extract was
taken, exposed patches of skin showed significantly less reddening
and significantly fewer sunburn cells.
There were also fewer UV-induced
compounds associated with skin cancer development.
"This is the first report of
an oral antioxidant to decrease DNA damage," the team notes.
The findings suggest that the herbal extract "might be able
to prevent long-term skin damage such as skin cancer."
SOURCE: Journal of the American
Academy of Dermatology, December 2004.
Reference
Source 89
January 11, 2005