Why is silicone shampoo more worth buying?(I)
Hits: 877
img
Why is silicone shampoo more worth buying?
In this era of baldness, a beautiful black hair, and a flawless white face, equally important. However, when we face all kinds of shampoo, it is inevitable that we are dazzled and entangled. For example, it is said that the shampoo containing silicone oil will clog the pores. Can't you buy it? Is silicone free really as good as everyone says? This time, we invited Dr. Yuan Chao of Shanghai Dermatology Hospital to tell you how to choose shampoo.
Silicone Oil: Healthy scalp is more suitable
Everyone wants to have healthy hair, and the most important definition of hair health is: rich, shiny, soft, and easy to handle. In our daily life, ironing, hairdrying, irrational washing, ultraviolet radiation, and even combing hair, it is easy to make the hair rough, bifurcated, or even fall off. As a result, many hair care products will add silicone oil. To determine whether a product contains silicone oil or not, you just need to see if there is polydimethylsiloxane in the ingredients.
But there are always rumors that silicone oil will clog the pores... Silicone oil is also added in many skin care products. It is a kind of oil with high quality, mild and good skin feeling, and the added concentration is higher than that of shampoo products (about 5-10%). How come no one said that silicone oil in skin care products can clog pores? Moreover, the concentration of silicone oil in shampoo products is generally about 1%-4%. When shampooing, most of the silicone oil will be washed out. Don't worry. Studies have confirmed that the deposition rate of silicone oil in shampoo on the surface of hair is up to 20%, and this deposited "oil" is only a drop in the bucket compared with the "oil" secreted by the scalp itself. Moreover, silicone oil has good viscosity and ductility, which can repair damaged hair scales on the surface of hair. It not only contributes to the sense of wet and slippery hair and wet combing, but also contributes greatly to the sense of dry and dry combing of hair.
From Dr. Clove