Episode Description
Snail slime, or snail mucin, has become a popular product in skin care.
Some claim it has anti-ageing properties, but if the early research shakes out, snail mucus could have even more significant uses.
Norman and Tegan discuss why snail gunk has become a hero of cosmetics, and what else it might be capable of.
References:
- Why Snail Mucin? Or, How This Ancient Practice Became a Skin Care Sensation
- Chemical composition, mineral profile, anti-bacterial, and wound healing properties of snail slime of Helix aspersa Müller
- Extraction, structure, pharmacological activities and applications of polysaccharides and proteins isolated from snail mucus
- Antimicrobial Activities of Different Fractions from Mucus of the Garden Snail Cornu aspersum
- Antimicrobial efficacy of Egyptian Eremina desertorum and Helix aspersa snail mucus with a novel approach to their anti-inflammatory and wound healing potencies
- Reviewing The Potential of Snail Extract to Accelerate and Improve Burn Wound Healing: A Literature Review
- HelixComplex snail mucus exhibits pro-survival, proliferative and pro-migration effects on mammalian fibroblasts
- The efficacy of Helix aspersa Müller extract in the healing of partial thickness burns: A novel treatment for open burn management protocols
- Helix aspersa maxima mucus exhibits antimelanogenic and antitumoral effects against melanoma cells
- 849 Snail mucus increases the anti-cancer activity of anti-PD-L1 antibody in melanoma
- Snail Mucus Enhances Chemosensitivity of Triple-negative Breast Cancer Via Activation of the Fas Pathway
- Snails and Skin: A Systematic Review on the Effects of Snail-based Products on Skin Health
- From Nature to Nurture: The Science and Applications of Snail Slime in Health and Beauty
- Artificial Snail Mucus Could Advance Cancer Treatments – Johns Hopkins University
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