A 'polish' refers to a physical/mechanical exfoliating ingredient or product containing abrasive particles (such as sugar, salt, ground seeds, or synthetic beads) used to manually slough off dead surface skin cells. It works by friction rather than chemical action to smooth and brighten skin texture.
| Reported effect | How often | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Transient redness or erythema | Common | Mild, temporary flushing from mechanical friction, usually resolving within minutes to hours. |
| Skin irritation or stinging | Common | More likely with sensitive skin or overuse; reduced by gentler particles and lighter pressure. |
| Microtears or abrasions | Uncommon | Associated with sharp-edged abrasives (e.g., crushed shells/seeds) or aggressive scrubbing. |
| Dryness and barrier disruption | Uncommon | Excessive exfoliation can impair the stratum corneum and increase transepidermal water loss. |
| Worsening of inflammatory acne | Uncommon | Mechanical agitation may aggravate active inflamed lesions or pustules. |
| Allergic or irritant contact dermatitis | Rare | Typically attributable to fragrances, preservatives, or botanical components rather than the abrasive itself. |
| Post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation | Rare | Possible after irritation, more notable in darker skin phototypes. |
Frequencies reflect typical cosmetic use reported in the literature, not a guarantee for your skin.
Peer-reviewed papers on this ingredient, via PubMed.