POLYHERBAL SHAMPOO POWDER

Authors

  • Akula Nikhil Prashant

Abstract

 OBJECTIVE: To formulate a Poly herbal shampoo powder containing natural ingredients with an emphasis on safety and efficacy which will avoid the risk posed by chemical ingredients. It clears sebum, dirt, dandruff, promotes hair growth, strengthens and darkens hair. Moreover it also acts as a conditioning agent and performs all these actions without affecting or damaging hair. The herbs Amla, Bhringaraj, Hibiscus, Shikakai and Ginger have been selected to formulate the poly herbal shampoo powder on the basis of a traditional system and scientific justification with modern uses.

METHOD: Poly herbal shampoo powders were accurately weighed, passed through sieve no.100, prepared by mixing in their ascending order of quantities with continuous trituration, stored in air tight containers and used for further studies. All the five formulations (F1-F5) were subjected to organoleptic studies, general powder charecterstics, physicochemical evaluation, ash and alcohol soluble extractives, moisture content determination, pH determination, cleaning action, foaming capacities, dirt dispersion, wetting time and studies on nature of hair after wash.

RESULTS: All the five formulations (F1-F5) offered a suitable practical approach and achieved a better usage. General powder characteristics showed results in specified limits. Physicochemical evaluations, pH determination, ability to remove grease, foaming capacity, dirt dispersion, wetting time and nature of hair after wash were found to yield satisfactory results for F2 formulation.

CONCLUSION: The present work confirmed the successful preparation of Poly herbal shampoo powders by mixing method without using other excipients in different concentrations. Amongst all the five formulations (F1-F5) F2 yielded satisfactory results.

  KEY WORDS:    Poly Herbal shampoo powder, Formulation & Evaluation methods

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Mithal BM, Saha RN. A Handbook of Cosmetic. 1st ed. Delhi: Vallabh Prakashan; 2002. p. 110-2.

Glaser DA. Anti-ageing products and cosmeceuticals. Facial Plastic Surgery, Clinics of North America; 2004;12(4):363-72.

Sharma PP. Cosmetics Formulation, Manufacturing and Quality Control. 3rd ed. Delhi: Vandana Publications; 1998. p. 644-7.

Mehta RM. Dispensing Pharmacy. 1st ed. Delhi: Vallabh Prakashan; 2008. p. 108.

Gennaro AR. Remington: The Science and Practice of Pharmacy. 20th ed. Mary Land: Lippincott Williams and Wilkins; 2000. p. 437.

Evans WC. Treas, Evans Pharmacognosy. 16th ed. New York: Harcourt Brace and Company Ltd.; 1997. p. 128.

Subrahmanyam CV. Text Book of Physical Pharmacy. 2nd ed. Vallabh Prakashan; 2000. p. 221-4.

Alfred M. Physical Pharmacy. 4th ed. Philadelphia, London: Lea and Febiger; 1993. p. 431-2.

More HN, Hazare AA. Physical Practical Pharmacy. 1st ed. Nashik: Career Publications; 2007. p. 114-9.

Khandelwal KR. Practical Pharmacognosy. 2nd ed. Pune: Nirali Prakashan; 2012. p. 23.6-.9.

Sharma RM, Shaha K, Patel J. Evaluation of prepared formulations and to compare formulated shampoo with marketed shampoo. Int J Pharm Pharm Sci 2011;3(4):402-5.

Deshmukh S, Kushal B, Ghode S. Formulation and evaluation of herbal shampoo and comparative studies with herbal marketed shampoo. Int J Pharm Biosci 2012;3(3):638-45.

Klein K. Evaluation of shampoo foam. Cosmet Toiletries Mag 2004;119(10):32-5.

Barel AO, Paye M, Maibach HI. Handbook of Cosmetic Science and Technology. Vol. 423. New York, Basel: Marcel Dekker, Inc.; 2001. p. 583-8, 773-5.

Dubey S, Nema N, Nayak S. Preparation and evaluation of herbal shampoo powder. Anc Sci Life 2004;24(1):38-44.

Published

01-01-2015

How to Cite

Prashant, A. N. “POLYHERBAL SHAMPOO POWDER”. Asian Journal of Pharmaceutical and Clinical Research, vol. 8, no. 1, Jan. 2015, pp. 266-70, https://journals.innovareacademics.in/index.php/ajpcr/article/view/3809.

Issue

Section

Original Article(s)