June 10, 2026

What Baby Skin Science Reveals About Barrier Repair — A Cosmetic Chemist's PhD Research

What Baby Skin Science Reveals About Barrier Repair — A Cosmetic Chemist's PhD Research
What Baby Skin Science Reveals About Barrier Repair — A Cosmetic Chemist's PhD Research
Demystifying Cosmetics
What Baby Skin Science Reveals About Barrier Repair — A Cosmetic Chemist's PhD Research
YouTube podcast player iconApple Podcasts podcast player iconSpotify podcast player icon
YouTube podcast player iconApple Podcasts podcast player iconSpotify podcast player icon

Skin barrier repair is one of the most used phrases in skincare — and one of the least understood. In this episode, cosmetic scientist and PhD researcher Ava Perkins uses the biology of premature infant skin to expose what the industry consistently gets wrong about barrier function, NMF, and what short-term hydration claims actually prove.

Jennifer Cookson sits down with Ava — whose background spans cosmetic formulation science, pharmaceutical biomembrane research, and science communication — to go deeper into skin biology than most cosmetic brands are willing to go.

What you will learn in this episode:

— Why do premature infant skin and aging skin face the same biological vulnerabilities

— Why measuring hydration over 24 or 48 hours tells you almost nothing about long-term barrier health

— What does desquamation downregulation in premature infants reveal about how skin actually matures

— Why the vernix caseosa — the skin's first moisturizer — is more significant than baby care brands acknowledge

— How diaper dermatitis forms, and why treating it is genuinely difficult

— What NMF components and tape stripping reveal that TEWL measurements often cannot

— Why most brands are oversimplifying what barrier repair actually means

Ava Perkins is a cosmetic scientist and PhD candidate in pharmaceutical and biomembrane sciences at the University of Cincinnati. Follow her at @ava.perki on Instagram.

Takeaways:

- Premature infant skin has a thinner stratum corneum, lower NMF, and downregulated desquamation — the body is prioritising becoming skin over repopulating it

- pH and NMF levels appear to play a significant role in whether premature infants develop conditions like atopic dermatitis — research ongoing

- The vernix caseosa functions as the skin's first moisturizer — companies like Aino have begun developing products that replicate its properties

- Short-term hydration endpoints (24 hours, 48 hours) have limited relevance to long-term barrier health

- Barrier repair is not a single mechanism — UV damage, overuse of actives, and environmental triggers all impair the barrier differently

- Tape stripping and NMF component analysis may be more consistent than TEWL for measuring barrier health in clinical contexts

- There are fewer than 10 cosmetic science degree programs in the United States