Skin Conditioning
ROYAL JELLY VESICLES
Safety score · 0–100
Fine
Derived from EU CosIng regulatory status, PubChem hazard data and published research. How we score.
About
Nanoscale vesicles derived from royal jelly. Natural but carries bee-allergen concerns.
Royal jelly vesicles are membrane-bound nanoparticles isolated from royal jelly (the bee-glandular secretion that feeds queen bees). They carry proteins (major royal jelly proteins / MRJPs), lipids, and small RNAs, claimed to provide skin-conditioning and regenerative signals. Royal jelly itself is a known allergen — there are documented IgE-mediated reactions to oral and topical exposure, with rare reports of anaphylaxis. Cosmetic vesicle preparations may still carry allergenic MRJP fragments. No CIR or SCCS opinion on vesicular royal jelly specifically. Standardization of "vesicle" preparations is not yet rigorous.
Function
Skin benefits
- Royal-jelly-derived nanovesicles with lipid and protein cargo
- Natural bee-origin ingredient
- Claimed skin-softening effects
Known concerns
- Bee-product allergies — royal jelly has documented IgE-mediated reactions, including rare anaphylaxis
- Vesicle isolation/standardization varies
- No CIR/SCCS review of vesicular royal jelly
- Ethical and supply concerns
References
EU CosIng database
European Commission cosmetic ingredient registry — regulatory status, restrictions, authorised functions.
Related skin conditionings
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This profile is for educational purposes and does not constitute medical advice. Regulatory status and scientific understanding evolve — always read the physical product label and consult a healthcare professional for personal concerns.