Potential Utilisation of Theobroma cacao Pod Husk Extract: Protective Capability Evaluation Against Pollution Models and Formulation into Niosomes
Erika Chriscensia, Joshua Nathanael, Urip Perwitasari, Agus Budiawan Naro Putra, Shakila Angjaya Adiyanto, Pietradewi Hartrianti

TL;DR
This study explores using cocoa pod husk waste as an antioxidant to protect against pollution and improves its skin penetration by encapsulating it into niosomes.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel formulation of cocoa pod husk extract into niosomes to enhance topical delivery and evaluate its protective effects against pollution.
Findings
Cocoa pod husk extract showed significant antioxidant activity comparable to ascorbic acid.
Niosome formulation improved the topical penetration and stability of the extract.
The extract demonstrated protective effects against pollution models like H2O2 and cigarette smoke extract.
Abstract
Theobroma cacao L. beans have long been used for food and medicinal purposes. However, up to 52%–76% of Theobroma cacao L. fruit comprises its husk, which are regarded as waste and oftentimes thrown away. In fact, cocoa pod husks actually possess a high antioxidant capacity. Antioxidants can be used to fight free radicals that are produced by environmental pollution. In order to simulate the effects of pollution, H2O2 and cigarette smoke extract models were used respectively. However, the antioxidant properties are limited on the skin due to poor penetration. Hence, in order to increase the topical penetration, cocoa pod husk extract (CPHE) was also formulated into niosomes thereafter. CPHE was characterised using total phenolic content, total flavonoid content and three antioxidant assays. After that, cytotoxicity and cytoprotective assay were conducted on HaCaT cells, which represent…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLegal Education and Practice Innovations · Artificial Intelligence Applications · Student Assessment and Feedback
