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This time of year it's critical to keep your skin hydrated.

Drink plenty of water to offset the dehydration winter weather and indoor heat creates. Drinking alcohol, caffeinated beverages, and some medications (especially antihistamines) dehydrate your skin further.

Immediately after cleansing your face, apply a few drops of Hyaluronic hydration serum. Hyaluronic holds 1000 times its molecular weight in water, and hydrates skin from the outside-in plumping up the tissue and smoothing fine lines and crepey-ness! Follow with an appropriate moisturizer to hold the hydration in and protect your skin's acid mantle.

Don't forget to moisturize your body immediately after bathing. Seal in all the hydration with one of our all natural body moisturizers, or glide on a Lotion bar. If winter bathing dries out your skin, take shorter, cooler showers or baths. You can add colloidal oat flour to your bath to calm skin that tends to be irritated. If you're prone to eczema, consider adding a fish oil supplement to your daily nutritional regimen, and eat more healthy fats like avocado and olive oil. Can't keep the itch at bay? Topical CBD products will calm the nerves in the skin and reduce inflammation.

The Skin Barrier

The skin’s moisture barrier, made of cholesterol, fatty acids, and ceramides, is responsible for (READ MORE) locking in moisture and keeping skin hydrated and healthy. When it’s damaged or compromised, it can cause serious skin dehydration issues. A healthy skin barrier retains the right balance of water and sebum, is resilient and supple, and appears radiant rather than dull and dry. With the right combination of skincare products containing effective active ingredients, they’ll be able to provide the skin with what it needs to defend, rebuild, and rejuvenate itself.

TEWL and Hydrating Compromised Skin

TEWL, the culprit.

Trans-epidermal Water Loss (TEWL) is a normal process in which our skin releases its water content into the air. While it happens continually, it should try to be minimized because dehydration can lead to dull, irritated skin that’s also prone to fine lines and wrinkles. TEWL is a completely natural process that serves a function, and just like with everything else, balance is key. Therefore, the goal isn’t to completely stop TEWL. Rather, the goal is to prevent excessive moisture loss. If TEWL is low, meaning less water is passing through the skin, then it will feel hydrated and moisturized. If TEWL is high then the skin will often feel dry and may crack, peel, or feel irritated, which happens quite frequently with compromised skin.

Why Does Skin Lose Hydration?

A loss of the lipids (sebum/ceramides) that normally seal in moisture can lead to dry skin. You can deplete skin water content quickly by extended exposure to cold or heat, using harsh soaps/detergents/and strong chemicals, using rough sponges/washcloths/exfoliating products, taking long, hot showers or baths and not drinking enough water. Of course, some medical conditions can take a toll on the barrier and skin health such as thyroid diseases, hormone imbalances, autoimmune disorders, poor nutrition, and other severe medical conditions along with the medications associated with them.

Healing a Compromised Barrier

In the treatment room, there are many ways to promote barrier health and perform treatments to help heal, nourish, and improve barrier function. Turning to more gentle natural enzymes, and mild polishes for exfoliation is the key to success when treating dehydrated skin conditions. There are many other treatments for this type of skin type such as hydrodermabrasion, LED, oxygen infusion, and using products with ingredients that help with redness, inflammation, and hydration that will assist in healing the barrier.

8 Tips To Hydrating Compromised Skin

1. Avoid Harsh Cleansers. If the skin is compromised, it needs to heal. Choose gentle, non-drying, cleansers that are fragrance-free and pH-balanced.

2. Use a low alcohol-filled type toner when necessary to remove traces of makeup and aid oily/acneic skin conditions. Tonic type toners will enhance product penetration.

3. Moisturize. When skin is compromised, it needs hydration AND moisturization so it can heal. Choose a moisturizer with ceramides, natural oils, butters, and natural anti-inflammatories that will help to repair the skin.

4. Avoid Harsh Exfoliators. Give skin a break from harsh acids, scrubs, retinoids, and other products. When the skin is compromised, they can add to more redness and irritation.

5. Keep it Simple. If your barrier is damaged, now is not the time to try new aggressive treatments, products, or makeup. Stick with nourishing, more clean versions of cleansers, toners, moisturizers, and sunscreens.

6.Don't overuse active ingredients. Overusing or misusing ingredients like retinoids or exfoliating acids can damage the skin over time. And once the skin barrier is damaged, TEWL is worsened.

7. Use serums to heal. The power of serums to help heal and hydrate even the most severely dry skin is so very important. Serums are key to repairing the damage to the barrier and its proper function.

8. Be Patient. It will take time to heal compromised skin. Give skin several weeks for the repair to begin until improvements can be noticed.

What are the best ways to hydrate compromised skin?

The importance of hydration and skin moisturization is key in maintaining desirable levels of TEWL for compromised skin. Hydration refers to the water content of the skin, whereas moisturization is the skin’s ability to retain those water molecules. Both are needed: hydration and moisturization for optimal skin health. Try maintaining a complete approach to the skin by using skincare products that contain effective moisturizing ingredients that won’t cause irritation or dryness from strong actives like acids and retinoids.

High-end moisturizers also add ceramides or other ingredients to repair the lipid barrier and prevent water loss. As the skin heals and the signs of a compromised skin barrier are no longer present, the skin will start to look and feel better and be less dry, red, inflamed, and reactive. Then, slowly reintroduce active ingredients like acids and retinol back into the skincare routine.





By Nancy Swankie 27 Jun, 2023
In the realm of health, sugar’s stock value has dropped precipitously in the past decade. In addition to tooth decay, sugar - more than fat, now is shouldering blame for the obesity epidemic and inflammation leading to systemic diseases. Sugar increases the aging speed and degree to which skin looks and feels older via a process called glycation. Sugar molecules in food attach themselves to proteins in the body, such as collagen and elastin, and peptides, and damages them. Glycation makes the proteins (cells, collagen, elastin) stiff and inflexible. When a protein has extra sugar, it is glycated, and reacts by creating Advanced Glycation End products (AGEs). AGEs mark particular proteins for amplified damage or higher metabolization by our bodies. "Glycation is not as well-known as oxidative stress, but we know from basic science research that glycation is an important process that can be induced by oxidative stress or inflammation, and through dietary exposure to alcohol and high-glycemic diets, which are heavy in processed carbs and sugar," says Dr. Hu. This adds a greater requirement for anti-oxidant supplements and skincare products which are anti-aging and free-radical-scavaging. Sugar is not the only culprit in causing AGEs. More than a century ago, Louis-Camille Maillard discovered that heating milk and amino acids turned the white liquid a yellow-brown color. The three stages of chemical reactions in which sugar and amino compounds (proteins and peptides) brown are called the Maillard reaction, frequently described as a "nonenzymatic browning reaction." creating free-radicals. This is another way skin can become hyperpigmented and broken-down. "The intermediate products of these chemical reactions undergo further irreversible oxidation, dehydration, polymerization and cross-linking reactions. Cross-linking of skin protein collagen has been found to be partially responsible for wrinkles {and deep hyperpigmentation] and other age-related skin changes resulting in the formation of AGEs over the course of several days to weeks," wrote the Korean authors of a 2017 paper published in the Journal of Exercise Nutrition & Biochemistry. What foods you consume and how you prepare them is another factor. Cooking processes that brown food, such as frying, roasting and grilling, produce harmful chemical compounds and diminish the nutritional value of the food. They also lead to the formation of advanced glycation end products, or AGEs. "Eventually, these AGEs make collagen rigid, making it lose its ability to keep skin firm and ultimately contributing to the aging process," says Michael Somenek, MD, a board-certified facial plastic surgeon in Washington, DC. "This process intensifies as we age. When our cells can’t repair or perform the key functions that they need in order to keep us in optimized cellular shape, the cells will act and look [and become] older than they really are." Glycation Science Glycation affects the internal structure of the skin, leading to less bounce, less elasticity, and a thinner-looking skin surface, says Lori Viar, senior director at Senté Labs. In addition, it can cause skin to be dry, with a dull, deflated surface, as the glycated tissues do not allow for the transfer of nutrients from the dermis to the epidermis. A spate of studies and subsequent media stories about glycation and skin aging appeared to peak around 2012 or so. Since then, AGEs research interest has shifted focus toward glycation’s role in the development of diseases such as heart and liver diseases, diabetes, neurodegenerative diseases and cancer. So, what can patients and skin care specialists do to counteract the effects of glycation and AGEs? Herve Pageon, PhD, a biologist in research in France, who has published numerous studies of the effects of glycation on skin aging, notes that "It is difficult to cite an active agent or molecule, in particular, because there are many described to have anti-glycation activity," he says. "To my knowledge, there are no molecules which could reverse AGEs after their final formation." Antioxidants, including green tea, can help prevent glycation through their abilities to fight free radicals. Slowing the Glycation Process Some molecules such as polyphenols, flavonoids, and anthocyanins are known to inhibit the formation of some AGEs by their antioxidant activity. Exercise also appears to help slow down glycation, Korean researchers found in both in vitro and in vivo rodent studies."When you exercise, you’re actually improving your insulin resistance or your metabolism of sugar," says Dr. Hu. "That process itself reduces protein glycation. "The researchers also noted that some supplements—such as polyphenol epicatechin, found in cocoa—might help reduce accumulation of AGEs. Green tea and linoleic acid (fish oil) all have the ability to fight free radicals as well. AGEs are part of a long list of contributors to photoaging, along with transforming growth factors, inflammation, oxidative stress, nuclear and mitochondrial DNA, telomeres and microRNA. "UV rays and smoking can increase AGEs; it’s all probably interconnected and is a multifactorial process," says Dr. Graber. As roasting or grilling that browns the surfaces of food can create AGEs, patients can avoid AGE formation by poaching, boiling or steaming food instead. "Avoid anything that creates a kind of brown coloring on food," says Dr. Graber. "There’s lots of good evidence that this can help reduce glycation end products. Reducing or eliminating processed foods, simple carbs and sugars and replacing them with fish and leafy greens can help offset this process. Exercise is just one of the lifestyle factors that can help slow down the process of skin aging. Glycation and Holistic Skin Care Important to note, however, is that this is not a one-size-fits-all approach. When we’re talking about sugar, we’re also talking about insulin sensitivity or resistance, Dr. Hu points out. "And that becomes an important compounding factor in terms of evaluating the end process," she says. "Glycation is only one part of the equation. You also have insulin growth factors, a signaling growth factor that gets triggered when you have exposure to a high sugar diet. That spike varies from person to person." Excessive UV exposure, inadequate diet, and lack of proper supplementation can exacerbate the aging process. If you're already doing the most important things to prevent skin aging and skin cancer, then preventing glycation should be an important part of your anti-aging protocol as well.
By Nancy Swankie 22 Jun, 2023
The gut and skin are both complex immune and neuroendocrine (of, relating to, or being a hormonal substance that influences the activity of nerves) organs, and each has a community of microbes that governs the physiology of their local surroundings. A 3-directional communication among the brain, skin, and gut, along with influences from the immune and endocrine systems, has been identified, although not fully understood. Pathology of the gastrointestinal tract and diet have been shown to influence skin health. Many skin conditions have been linked to gastrointestinal inflammation, including rosacea, psoriasis, and acne. Skin lesions can also occur in association with gastrointestinal conditions such as inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and celiac disease. The recognition that the gut and skin are connected is not new; traditional forms of medicine that have been around for thousands of years, such as Ayurvedic medicine and traditional Chinese medicine, have a gut-centric approach to health and disease. As research continues to expand in this area, the notion of a gut-skin axis has started to emerge in Western research. Modes of Communication From the Gut to the Skin The gut may communicate with the skin in several ways: Absorption of nutrients with a direct effect on the skin Absorption of nutrients that can stimulate hormonal changes that affect the skin Influence of gut microbiota on the immune system Modulation of the local microbiome that releases metabolites that may have distant effects on the skin Absorption of nutrients with a direct effect on the skin The absorption of nutrients and their direct effects on the skin has been a focus of several studies. For example, the intake of carotenoids has been correlated to yellowing of the skin, and beta-carotene supplementation has been studied in the prevention of sunburns. In addition, oral vitamin E can be delivered to the skin, especially through sebaceous (oil) glands. Absorption of nutrients that stimulate a change in hormones Absorbed nutrients frequently shift hormones in the body. Examples include the influence of carbohydrates and whey protein on insulin levels, which can have an impact on the skin. As an example, whey protein may be associated with increased insulin secretion and has been reported as a potential culprit in acne flares. Insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) activates the sebaceous glands to produce more inflammatory mediators and more sebum, which may trigger a worsening of acne. So, consuming more high-glycemic, refined carbohydrates may increase the concentration of IGF-1 and increase the risk of developing acne. The influence of gut microbiota on the immune system The gut microbiota interact with the immune system and appear to interact with and educate the regulatory T cells that can drive inflammation elsewhere in the body. Regulatory T cells seem to play an important role in autoimmune and inflammatory skin diseases although the role of the gut microbiome remains under study in these areas. Modulation of the local microbiome and influence on the local immune system The microbiota and the gut lining interact and release secondary metabolites that can have distant effects on the skin. Previous studies have suggested that changes in gut microbiota and the microbiota-derived inflammatory mediators may impact chronic inflammation and the risk for cardiovascular disease, obesity, kidney disease, and diabetes.There is growing evidence that gut-derived mediators may communicate with the skin as well. Examples of mediators include lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and short chain fatty acids. It has been hypothesized that gut-derived LPS may play a role in acne inflammation, though definitive mechanistic studies are still lacking. Short-chain fatty acids have long been postulated to affect general inflammation in the body and modulate obesity, diabetes, and colon cancer risk. Short-chain fatty acids may modulate inflammation, and patients with acne have lower blood levels of these fatty acids than healthy controls (Sivamani, unpublished data, 2018). While these mechanisms may not serve as a comprehensive examination of the gut-skin axis, they bring to light the gut’s ability to communicate with the skin through multiple modalities. Apart from possible mechanisms, there are several lines of evidence that suggest that gut dysbiosis is involved in skin disease. Disease-Based Examples of Gut Dysbiosis in Skin Disease Dysbiosis an imbalance of the intestinal microbiota. Small intestinal bacterial overgrowth and papulopustular rosacea. Often mistaken for acne, papulopustular rosacea can occur with erythematotelangiectatic rosacea, and is characterized by erythema, papules, and pustules. Papulopustular rosacea is not only associated with a dysbiosis of the skin microbiome, but also with small intestinal bacterial overgrowth (SIBO), a dysbiosis of the intestinal tract. Dysbiosis and psoriasis One recent study comparing the gut microbial composition of patients with psoriasis to that of healthy patients found that psoriasis patients had an increased presence of Faecalibacterium and decreased Bacteroides compared to the healthy controls. A similar study found that, compared to healthy controls, psoriasis patients had an increased ratio of Faecalibacterium to Bacteroides in the intestinal microbiome and an increase in Streptococcus and decrease in both Propionibacterium and Actinobacteria on the skin’s surface. The recognition that the gut and skin are connected is not new; traditional forms of medicine that have been around for thousands of years, such as Ayurvedic medicine and traditional Chinese medicine, have a gut-centric approach to health and disease. High-glycemic diet and acne vulgaris The Standard American Diet (SAD) is a high-glycemic diet rich in processed fast foods, refined carbohydrates, animal proteins, and omega-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids. Seventy-five percent of Americans consume a Standard American Diet. Studies have shown that consuming a Standard American Diet increases pro-inflammatory mediators. Leucine, an amino acid found in animal protein and dairy products, stimulates the oil glands and can create inflammation, causing breakouts. The consumption of a SAD increases the secretion of androgen hormones such as testosterone, which activates mTORC1 to stimulate the sebaceous follicles to produce more sebum. Acne is recognized to be diet-driven disease. Areas where high-glycemic diets are not consumed, such as in isolated hunter-gatherer communities, have extremely low rates of acne. Inflammatory bowel disease and various skin lesions Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis are the 2 main categories of IBD. Their pathophysiology is not limited to the gastrointestinal tract; IBD is associated with extraintestinal manifestations in 6% to 47% of patients. In 25% of patients with IBD, the extraintestinal manifestations precede the diagnosis of Crohn’s or ulcerative colitis. Although the mechanism is not well-understood, information collected from a clinical trial suggested that blockade of tumor necrosis factor (TNF) may play a role in the pathogenesis of these skin conditions in IBD. Celiac disease and dermatitis herpetiformis Dermatitis herpetiformis is an extremely pruritic eruption seen on the buttocks and the extensor surfaces of the extremities. It affects approximately 17% of patients with celiac disease, though it may not be detected until up to 10 years after the celiac disease diagnosis. In most cases, dermatitis herpetiformis in patients with celiac disease indicates poor adherence to a gluten-free diet. The Role of Probiotics When oral probiotics are ingested, they can have effects on distant organ systems through the immune system. Through interactions with lymphoid tissue, probiotics may regulate the release of inflammatory cytokines that are often increased in various skin conditions. There is evidence supporting the use of probiotics for skin conditions. There are many species of probiotics, and there are specific types recommended for specific conditions. While questions still remain, there is no doubt that further research into the gut microbiome and how it contributes more widely to general health is exciting. As our knowledge grows regarding how food, probiotics, and the gut microbiome modulate health, it is our hope that our dietary and lifestyle patterns will shift toward both healthier skin and a healthier metabolic state. If you need help selecting a proper probiotic supplement, Skinplicity has many options available through their supplement prescribing platform FullScript.
22 May, 2023
Skinplicity's cosmeceuticals are custom-formulated in the US, (including NC), Canada, Belgium, and Germany, backed by science according to my requirements to exceed the industry standards for quality, safety, potency, and value. You're not paying for fancy packaging, but the contents are some of the very best available anywhere. All my products are formulated in FDA-regulated, CGMP labs (CGMP refers to the Current Good Manufacturing Practice regulations enforced by the FDA). No fillers, unhealthy preservatives, or xenoestrogenic chemicals. Here are some of the exclusive Skinplicity products you cannot get anywhere else: Oil-soluble Vitamin C. At the 10% legal limit of potency, this type of vitamin C does not break-down and oxidize like traditional L-Ascorbic acid serums, and is long-lasting in the tissue. It promotes collagen, elastin, and filaggrin structural proteins - the substances that keep your skin firm and elastic. This form of vitamin C also scavenges out free radicals (damaged cells), inhibits metalloproteinases which are free radicals that age the skin quickly, breaks up unwanted melanin (the dark pigment) and evens out tone, and promotes rapid healing. This particular type of vitamin C also provides a slight but additional benefit of UVA & UVB radiation protection. Not a substitute for sunscreen but a great booster! This vitamin C has a two-year shelf life, and it is in a base of coenzyme Q 10, astaxanthan, in organic seed & nut oils. Excellent for every age and skin type. Non-comedogenic (does not clog pores). My personal number one choice in Serums. Cleansers for every skin-type and condition. Everyone is different, and Skinplicity has a cleanser for every skin type & condition. Mandelic, salicylic, lactic/monolaurin, probiotic, creamy milk/hydrating, and citrus gel cleansers. These are concentrated so you need very little. Concentrated Exfoliating Treatments. Maintain your facial longer by using condition-specific exfoliators. We carry a very gentle fine exfoliator in an organic rose lotion base, and a more active Mandelic Acid scrub in an antioxidant cleanser base. When used properly, these products will help remove dead cells, and create brighter, softer skin and stimulate healthy skin renewal. Potent Liquid Ceramide serum in an anti-inflammatory base. Gear-up your tissue for drier winter days. Ceramides are made up of long-chain fatty acids that link with other important molecules to promote cellular function. Ceramides help create a barrier to prevent permeability. This locks moisture into your skin, which helps prevent dryness and irritation. The added hemp terpenes and antioxidants calm and heal the skin. Tri-Copper Peptides. Custom-formulated by my compounding pharmacy. The human copper-binding peptide GHK-Cu (glycyl-l-histidyl-l-lysine) is a small, naturally occurring tri-peptide present in human plasma that also can be released from tissues in case of an injury. Since its discovery in 1973, GHK-Cu established itself as a powerful protective and regenerative ingredient, which is currently widely used in skin and hair products. What does it do: Tighten loose skin and reverse thinning of aged skin Repair protective skin barrier proteins Improve skin firmness, elasticity, and clarity Reduce fine lines, depth of wrinkles, and improve structure of aged skin Smooth rough skin Reduce photodamage, mottled hyperpigmentation, skin spots and lesions Improve overall skin appearance Stimulate wound healing Protect skin cells from UV radiation Reduce inflammation and free radical damage Increase hair growth and thickness, enlarge hair follicle size https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6073405/ Probiotic Cream-gel and Liquid Probiotics. These particular actives are exclusive to Skinplicity! They are the only known probiotic products with live spores. These can help with acne, rosacea, fungal rashes such as ringworm, and seborrheic conditions. They also reduce the allergenic irritancy of Demodex mite infestations (which everyone has on their skin!). Hyaluronic acid serum, low molecular weight. Our most popular serum ever! This hydrating, water-based serum holds 1000 times its molecular weight in water adding necessary hydration to your skin without any weight or stickiness. Did you know you can be naturally oily and still have dehydrated skin? Hyaluronic acid works its very best when layered underneath a moisturizer… Plumping the skin, smoothing out fine lines, and keeping it calm throughout the day. Hyaluronic acid also improves the bioavailability of any retinol product, and It may help ameliorate the unwanted irritation from certain irritating forms of retinol. Vitamin A Retinoid Serum. Skinplicity only uses Granactive Retinoid in their proprietary vitamin A serum. It is one of the most bio-available, non-prescription forms of Vitamin-A used in high-end cosmeceuticals. It is anti-aging and anti-acne and provides low irritation, effective active delivery in the skin. In addition, it decreases the effects of UV induced skin damage and helps clear acne related symptoms, while brightening pigmented skin conditions. It effectively turns over healthy new skin cells, and may be the perfect active for sun-damaged skin, and skin prone to growing keratoses and benign skin lesions. High Performance Antioxidant Moisturizer & Lotion. Pure benefits! Formulated without any fillers. Filled with antioxidants, naturally-protective elderberry phytocide, astaxanthan, liposomal vitamins and an organic proprietary skin – saver blend. These product actives far exceed even the highest-priced branded moisturizers. Our rich moisturizer has the added benefits of luscious CalophyllumTacamahaca (Tamanu). Since the 1930s, researchers have been studying Tamanu butter in labs and hospitals around the globe and have found that it is incredibly rich in fatty acids and beneficial compounds which helps support and balance skin moisture. It also contains Astrocaryum Murumuru Seed Butter. Murumuru Butter is one of the most stable butters known. It contains natural antioxidants, and prevents oxidation providing a natural longer shelf-life. No short-cuts, no fillers, no BS!
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