Source

Polyhydroxy acids and bionic acids

Reviewed by SkinKnowledgeBase Editorial TeamLast updated May 27, 2026

Quick Summary

PubMed-indexed PHA literature supports cautious discussion of gluconolactone and lactobionic acid as exfoliating-acid alternatives.

Structured source facts
Source typepeer_reviewed

What Studied

This source is used for conservative skincare education, ingredient mechanisms, reaction-pattern boundaries, or clinician-referral language.

Main Findings

The source supports practical, cautious wording and does not justify cure claims or overconfident product promises.

Why It Matters

It anchors the page in a more reliable reference than marketing copy or thin SEO summaries.

Original Source — Polyhydroxy acids and bionic acids. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/?term=polyhydroxy+acids+gluconolactone+skin (rel="nofollow")

Original Source

Polyhydroxy acids and bionic acids

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Source
Polyhydroxy acids and bionic acids
Quick Summary
PubMed-indexed PHA literature supports cautious discussion of gluconolactone and lactobionic acid as exfoliating-acid alternatives.
What Studied
This source is used for conservative skincare education, ingredient mechanisms, reaction-pattern boundaries, or clinician-referral language.
Main Findings
The source supports practical, cautious wording and does not justify cure claims or overconfident product promises.
Why It Matters
It anchors the page in a more reliable reference than marketing copy or thin SEO summaries.
Supports
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