UV-VIS ANALYSIS AND DETERMINATION OF HYDROQUINONE IN BODY LOTIONS AND CREAMS SOLD IN RETAIL OUTLETS IN BARATON, KENYA
Keywords:
Hydroquinone, Body care products, Carcinogenesis and UV-Vis, Chemical AnalysisAbstract
Hydroquinone is an organic compound of the Phenol family used in body care products for its
therapeutic value as a topical agent for the treatment of certain skin conditions. Twenty four (24) body lotions
and body creams were randomly sampled from the retail outlets within Baraton. The labels on the packages
noticeably did not indicate the presence of hydroquinone. The creams were subjected to chemical analysis by
a DR500 UV spectrophotometer. The level of hydroquinone was below 2% for all the twenty four creams,
which is the upper limit for cosmetic creams. Creams with 2-4% hydroquinone concentrations are allowed as
drug prescriptions and not sold as an over the counter creams and lotions. This chemical analysis indicates that
despite the potential health hazards of hydroquinone, cosmetic products containing this agent are available to
consumers with inadequate warning to the dangers associated with hydroquinone.
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
License Terms
All articles published in the Baraton Interdisciplinary Research Journal (BIRJ) are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0).
This license permits users to share (copy and redistribute) and adapt (remix, transform, build upon) the material for non-commercial purposes, provided that proper attribution is given to the original authors, a link to the license is included, and any derivative works are distributed under the same license.
Full license details: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/