Activated oxygen skincare is a category built around ozone-infused topical formulations. Here is what it is, the forms it comes in, and an honest look at what shoppers can expect.
Ozonated glycerin and ozonated oil are the two most common formats for ozone-infused cosmetic ingredients. They're often mentioned in the same breath, and it can be unclear which suits which routine. This guide explains the differences in practical terms — format, solubility, routine placement, a...
Important framing. This article summarises published research on ozonated glycerin and skin-repair biology as explored in laboratory models. It is educational context about research, not a product claim, not a treatment recommendation, and not medical advice. Kōzōn products are cosmetics intende...
Age spots — the flat, darker patches of skin that develop over time, mostly from cumulative sun exposure — are one of the most common concerns people bring to skincare. Most brightening ingredients in cosmetic use target the appearance of these spots: reducing their visual prominence, supporting ...
A lot of skincare products marketed to people with blemish-prone skin treat it like a problem to be aggressively fought. Heavy treatments, stripping cleansers, and drying actives are the norm. That approach works for some people; for many others, it creates its own cycle of over-correction — stri...
A note before this article. This piece summarises published research on ozonated ingredients in dermatological contexts, including psoriasis. It is an educational summary of what researchers have studied, not a recommendation, not a treatment guide, and not a claim about Kōzōn products. Kōzōn pr...