SUPER ANTI-AGING FACE CREAM

Dr. Barbara Sturm

SUPER ANTI-AGING FACE CREAM

SUPER ANTI-AGING FACE CREAM

Dr. Barbara Sturm

super-anti-aging-face-cream

Moisturize

9643644256549

Morning or Evening?

Morning
Evening
Both

How often will you use this product?

Everyday
Every other day
Every 3 days
Every 4 days
Every 5 days
Every 6 days
Once a week
Twice a week
On specific days
As needed
On rotation

Notes

Add to Routine
Compare with Similar

Compatibility Score

0%

Microbiome
Ingredients
Biological
Environment
Lifestyle

How It Fits Into Your Skincare Routine

Login to see compatibility score and learn how this works with your skin.

Highlights

WHAT IS IT?

Anti-aging face cream

FEATURES

Plumping effect on wrinkles, boosts skin's natural barrier function, provides fundamental and penetrating hydration

BEST FOR

Dry skin, sensitive skin, lost of skin elasticity

CHECKS

Paraben-free, GMO-free, PEG-free, fragrance-free

Who Is It For?

Not Specified But Suitable For More Mature Skin And Younger Skin Types

What Does It Help With?

Anti-aging Wrinkles Skin Firmness And Suppleness Hydration Radiance

Budget

Premium To Professional

How To Use

Which routine should it be used in?

Morning
Evening
 
Cleanse
Tone
Eyecare
Serum
Moisturize
Suncare
 

Instructions:

After cleansing, apply gently to the face, neck and dรฉcolletรฉ as well as the delicate skin around the eyes. Recommended for morning and evening use for more mature skin. Younger skin types can integrate it a few times a week, alternating with their usual Dr. Barbara Sturm moisturizer.

Key Information

Vegan
Cruelty-free
Sensitive-safe
Non-comedogenic
Hypoallergenic
Microbiome-safe
Preservative-free
Eco-friendly
Pregnancy-safe
Oil-free

What Dr. Barbara Sturm Says

Product Description:

The SUPER ANTI-AGING FACE CREAM provides instant and long-term anti-aging results and a plumping effect on wrinkles. Dr. Sturm created the SUPER ANTI-AGING FACE CREAM using a unique biomimetic formulation that mimics the skin's natural barrier and strengthens the skin's properties. The lipid-rich texture absorbs quickly into the skin, while having a long-lasting effect on your complexion, leaving your skin looking fresh, youthful and radiant.

About the Brand:

Dr. Barbara Sturm's eponymous skincare line is the culmination of her years of anti-inflammatory research and experience in aesthetic medicine. Known for its "vampire facial" and innovative use of purslane, this brand offers a science-meets-nature approach to skincare. Indulge in luxurious formulations that promote skin health and combat the visible signs of aging at a molecular level.

Ingredients Overview

Ingredients List

Shea Butter, Glycerine, Purslane Extract, Olive Oil, Avocado Oil, Vitamin E, Ceramides, Hyaluronic Acid, Bistorta Root, Marine Plankton Extract, Panthenol, Squalane, Sunflower Seed Oil, Lecithin, Phytolipids, Teprenone

Key Ingredients

Plankton Biopolymers, Purslane, Hyaluronic Acid, Meadow Knotweed Extract

Ingredients Details

Avocado Oil

Common Name(s): Avocado oil,avocado butter (solid fraction)

CAS Number: 8024-32-6

DESCRIPTION

What It Does: Provides deep moisturization with rich oleic acid, phytosterols, and lutein antioxidants for mature, dry skin.

Why It's Used: Rich, deeply penetrating oil for dry and mature skin requiring intensive emolliency beyond lightweight oils.

How It Works: Very high oleic acid (55-74%) penetrates deeply into stratum corneum for conditioning. beta-sitosterol and other phytosterols provide barrier repair and mild anti-inflammatory activity. lutein provides antioxidant protection. high unsaponifiable fraction (2-11%) provides unique skin bioactives.

Typically Found In: Rich moisturizers,dry skin oils,anti-aging formulas,body butters

TECHNICAL DETAILS

Primary Category: Functional ingredient โ€“ emollient

Secondary Functions: Deep penetrating emollient,phytosterol activity,anti-aging

Application Areas:

Facial Skincare

Body Care

Hair Care

Beard Care

Color Cosmetics (Makeup)

Dietary/Oral Supplements

Typical Concentration Range: 1%โ€“50%

SOURCING & ETHICS

Vegan Status: Yes โ€“ from persea gratissima fruits

Halal Status: Yes

Source Notes: Cold-pressed from avocado fruit flesh. high unsaponifiable fraction (unsaponified lipids) makes avocado oil uniquely bioactive vs other oils with low unsaponifiable content.

SKIN COMPATIBILITY

Irritancy Rating: 1/5 โ€“ very low

Comedogenicity Rating: 3/5 โ€“ moderate; high oleic acid; test for skin type

Sensitivity Concerns: Non-irritating.

Safe for Sensitive Skin: Yes

SAFETY & COMPATIBILITY

Safety Profile: Excellent safety profile. ewg score: 1.

Works Well With: Humectants,ceramides,actives as carrier

Avoid Combining With: No significant incompatibilities

SCIENTIFIC NOTE

Avocado oil's unusually high unsaponifiable fraction (2-11% vs <2% for most plant oils) contains phytosterols, terpenes, vitamin e, and chlorophyll that remain after saponification and provide skin-active benefits not present in most other plant oils. this unsaponifiable fraction is what makes avocado oil pharmacologically distinct from simple fatty acid triglyceride oils.

Last Verified: Cosing database,dreher & davenport avocado review,cir safety assessment

Primary Sources: 2026-03-12

Ceramides

Common Name(s): Ceramides,ceramide sphingolipid,sc barrier lipid

CAS Number: N/a

DESCRIPTION

What It Does: Restores sc lamellar lipid bilayers, reduces trans-epidermal water loss, repairs barrier dysfunction in dry and eczematous skin, and strengthens the physical barrier against environmental irritants.

Why It's Used: Provides direct structural barrier lipid replacement โ€” unlike humectants that attract water, ceramides physically rebuild the lipid bilayer architecture required to retain moisture within the skin.

How It Works: Ceramides integrate into the sc intercellular lamellar bilayer, restoring the ordered orthorhombic packing disrupted in barrier-compromised skin. the sphingosine backbone's amide bond and hydroxyl groups form the h-bonding network that stabilises the lamellar structure.

Typically Found In: Barrier repair,dry skin,eczema-prone

TECHNICAL DETAILS

Primary Category: Functional ingredient โ€“ emollient

Secondary Functions: Barrier sealing,softening

Application Areas:

Facial Skincare

Body Care

Hair Care

Beard Care

Color Cosmetics (Makeup)

Dietary/Oral Supplements

Typical Concentration Range: 0.01%โ€“5%

SOURCING & ETHICS

Vegan Status: Conditional

Halal Status: Yes

Source Notes: Plant-derived, synthetic or animal-derived. verify source.

SKIN COMPATIBILITY

Irritancy Rating: 1/5 โ€“ very low

Comedogenicity Rating: 1/5 โ€“ low; formulation-dependent

Sensitivity Concerns: Non-irritating.

Safe for Sensitive Skin: Yes

SAFETY & COMPATIBILITY

Safety Profile: Excellent safety profile. ewg score: 1.

Works Well With: Humectants,ceramides,actives as carrier

Avoid Combining With: No significant incompatibilities

SCIENTIFIC NOTE

Sc ceramides comprise ~50% of the sc lipid mass (by weight) and are essential for barrier function; ceramide depletion in atopic dermatitis and aged skin is a primary driver of barrier dysfunction and tewl elevation.

Last Verified: Cosing database,ceramides ceramide barrier review

Primary Sources: 2026-03-12

Glycerine

Common Name(s): Glycerin,universal humectant,water-binding skin conditioning

CAS Number: N/a

DESCRIPTION

What It Does: Attracts and retains moisture in the sc, improves skin barrier function at low concentrations, provides gentle keratolytic softening, and acts as a co-solvent for water-soluble actives.

Why It's Used: The reference humectant โ€” lowest cost, best safety profile, universal formulation compatibility, and present naturally in the sc via lipase-mediated glycerolipid hydrolysis makes glycerin the industry standard against which all humectants are benchmarked.

How It Works: Three hydroxyl groups form 6 h-bonds with water molecules per glycerol unit โ€” the highest oh-group density per carbon of any commercial humectant. glycerin also down-regulates epidermal serine proteases that overactivate in dry sc, improving desquamation and barrier integrity.

Typically Found In: All cosmetics,universal

TECHNICAL DETAILS

Primary Category: Functional ingredient โ€“ humectant

Secondary Functions: Tewl reduction,skin plumping

Application Areas:

Facial Skincare

Body Care

Hair Care

Beard Care

Color Cosmetics (Makeup)

Dietary/Oral Supplements

Typical Concentration Range: 1%โ€“40%

SOURCING & ETHICS

Vegan Status: Yes

Halal Status: Yes

Source Notes: Synthetic or naturally derived. excellent aqueous solubility.

SKIN COMPATIBILITY

Irritancy Rating: 1/5 โ€“ very low

Comedogenicity Rating: 0/5 โ€“ non-comedogenic

Sensitivity Concerns: Non-irritating; suitable for all skin types.

Safe for Sensitive Skin: Yes

SAFETY & COMPATIBILITY

Safety Profile: Excellent safety profile. ewg score: 1.

Works Well With: Ceramides,emollients,occlusives,glycerin,hyaluronic acid

Avoid Combining With: No significant incompatibilities

SCIENTIFIC NOTE

Epidermal lipases hydrolyse sc glycerophospholipids during cornification, releasing glycerol that contributes to the natural nmf โ€” topical glycerin directly supplements this endogenous sc humectant pool.

Last Verified: Cosing database,glycerin universal humectant review

Primary Sources: 2026-03-12

Hyaluronic Acid

Common Name(s): Ha,sodium hyaluronate (salt form),hyaluronan,d-glucuronic acid-n-acetyl-d-glucosamine polymer

CAS Number: 9004-61-9

DESCRIPTION

What It Does: Hyaluronic acid draws and locks moisture into the skin at multiple depths (surface and deeper layers depending on molecular weight), creating a plumping, smoothing, and hydrating effect.

Why It's Used: It is used because it is endogenous to human skin, making it exceptionally biocompatible and non-irritating. its unparalleled moisture-binding capacity makes it the most effective hydrating ingredient available.

How It Works: Ha binds water molecules through its many hydroxyl and carboxyl groups, creating a gel-like matrix. high molecular weight ha (>500 kda) hydrates the skin surface; low molecular weight ha (<50 kda) penetrates deeper to provide interior hydration.

Typically Found In: Serums,moisturizers,sheet masks,toners,eye creams,lip treatments,dermal fillers (injectable)

TECHNICAL DETAILS

Primary Category: Active ingredient โ€“ humectant/hydrator

Secondary Functions: Barrier repair,plumping,anti-aging

Application Areas:

Facial Skincare

Body Care

Hair Care

Beard Care

Color Cosmetics (Makeup)

Dietary/Oral Supplements

Typical Concentration Range: 0.1%โ€“2% (effective at very low concentrations; multi-weight ha provides superior results)

SOURCING & ETHICS

Vegan Status: Yes โ€“ biotechnology-derived (microbial fermentation of streptococcus equi or b. subtilis); vegan-certified versions widely available

Halal Status: Yes

Source Notes: Originally extracted from rooster combs; now predominantly produced via biotechnology (bacterial fermentation), which is vegan and more sustainable.

SKIN COMPATIBILITY

Irritancy Rating: 1/5 โ€“ very low; one of the gentlest skincare ingredients known

Comedogenicity Rating: 0/5 โ€“ non-comedogenic

Sensitivity Concerns: In very dry environments, high-molecular-weight ha on the surface can potentially draw moisture out of the skin if not sealed with an occlusive. apply to damp skin and seal with moisturizer.

Safe for Sensitive Skin: Yes โ€“ ideal for all skin types including rosacea, eczema, and post-procedure skin

SAFETY & COMPATIBILITY

Safety Profile: Exceptional safety profile. endogenous molecule โ€“ no toxicity concerns. ewg hazard score: 1. safe during pregnancy.

Works Well With: Virtually all ingredients; especially ceramides,glycerin,peptides,retinol (reduces irritation),niacinamide,vitamin c

Avoid Combining With: No significant incompatibilities; high concentrations of alcohol in a formula may reduce its efficacy

SCIENTIFIC NOTE

Hyaluronic acid naturally degrades in skin (half-life ~1โ€“2 days). the skin produces it endogenously, but production decreases with age. multi-molecular-weight ha formulas provide hydration at both surface and deeper skin levels.

Last Verified: Cosing database,cir safety assessment,papakonstantinou et al. (2012) dermato-endocrinology

Primary Sources: 2026-03-12