Deo Perfume Candy claims to tackle body odor from the inside out. (Image credit: PerfumeCandy.com)
Who needs deodorant when you can
eat your way to flowery freshness? A new candy claims to tackle body odor from
the inside out. “Science and nature have come together to make a functional
food that leaves your skin with a beautiful rose fragrance,” reads the website
for Deo Perfume Candy, which is currently sold on Amazon in the U.S.
The rose-flavored sweets contain
geraniol, an alcohol found in rose oil that “aromatizes” as it evaporates
through the skin, according to Deo maker Beneo, based in Belgium. But smell
scientists are skeptical about Deo’s deodorizing effects. “I think we can
probably agree that if you eat food with a lot of aromatic spice, like garlic
and curry, eventually it will work its way into your sweat and influence the
way you smell,” said George Preti, a chemist at the Monell Chemical Senses
Center in Philadelphia. “But no one has actually demonstrated that.”
Preti said “the wonderful smell known as body odor” depends on the chemical
composition of a person’s skin secretions and the type of bacteria feeding on
them. “Skin glands produce food for the bugs,” he said, adding that the type of
bacteria depends on the amount of oxygen and moisture in the area. “Body odor
is different for different parts of your body. Your underarms smell different
from your crotch, and your crotch smells different from your feet.”
In theory, changing the composition of skin secretions by eating
aromatic spices could change a person’s body odor, according to Preti.
“But we just don’t know,” he said, explaining that the only way to test
the theory would be a placebo-controlled trial with Deo and a candy without
geraniol. “Then after X number of days you could bring in blind assessors —
odor judges, if you will — to smell people’s t-shirts and tell you which ones
smell nicer.”
Deo is just one example of a nutricosmetic, an edible product that
purports to change the way you look or smell from the depths of your bowels. “Certainly
if an aromatic spice gets on your skin, it can persist for quite some time,”
said Preti, lamenting the smell of garlic that lingers on fingers long after a
clove has been chopped. “But whether eating something can make it exude through
your pours, like I said, it’s just never been demonstrated.”
Source: ABC News
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