corneometrie
Corneometrie is a non-invasive analytical technique used to assess the hydration level of the stratum corneum, the outermost layer of the skin. It relies on a handheld device called a corneometer, which measures the skin’s dielectric properties, primarily capacitance. These properties correlate with the water content in the superficial epidermis, so higher capacitance indicates greater skin hydration. The measurement is typically expressed in arbitrary units on a scale that is commonly near 0 to 100.
The corneometer probes the dielectric constant of the skin surface. Because water has a high dielectric constant,
Corneometry is widely used in cosmetics research and dermatology to evaluate moisturizers, serums, and other topical
Results are reported in relative, device-specific units rather than absolute water content, and readings are sensitive
See also: transepidermal water loss, skin hydration, corneometer.
---