Posts Tagged ‘cream’
Cope With Dry Skin and Itching
When your skin is less humidity, the skin tended itchy, scaly, red, rough, and in severe cases, cracked and inflamed. Tend to dry in the lower legs, arms and the back of the hand because this area produces less natural oil. The skin becomes drier as you age and during menopause. Your skin may become dry and cracked in the cold sore and dry, or if the face repeatedly in the washing and drying well.
You can do
Perform the following steps to reduce the discomfort of dry skin, itching, and improve appearance.
Warm bath, do not use soaps that contain perfumes or medicines (medicated soap)
Use a moisturizing cream as a soap substitute or added to bath water for moisturizing fluid
Apply a moisturizing cream, provide information on the regions of the open like your hands and face
As an alternative, use the oil to bath water that contains oatmeal.
Prevention
Prevent dryness of skin if you tend to dry or chapped, try the follow these steps:
Create even more cool homes
Use rubber gloves to clean the house, while other activities are also gardening
Decrease in direct sunlight
Rinse your laundry well and do not use moisturizer for clothing,
Drug
Moisturizing fluid to bathe
Use a liquid containing a mild liquid paraffin soluble in water to moisten and cleanse the skin. Soak for 10-20 minutes and dry with a soft to the skin moist.
Moisturizer
Use a moisturizing cream or ointment liquid in the water bath to cool the skin. Rinse, dry your skin and then apply a moisturizer to the entire body
Natural medicine
Oil oatmeal, oatmeal bath oil moisturizes dry and itchy skin. Soak for 10-20 minutes in warm water mixed with oatmeal oil.
Other Natural Remedies For Rosacea and Herbal
Liquorice (Licorice)
This is used as an ingredient in skin creams and it’s reported that a study using 62 patients with mild to moderate facial redness showed a significant improvement at the four and eight week assessments.
This study was presented to an American Academy of Dermatology (AAD) meeting. The patients used invite care routine which consisted of a cleanser, a day lotion with sunscreen and green pigments, a spot concealer with green pigments, and a night cream, all formulated with licochalcone A, which is a liquorice extract and also an anti malarial agent. It’s been shown to inhibit pro-inflammatory cytokines, eicosanoids, and reactive oxygen species inhumane skin cells (related to sun damage of skin, photoaging etc).
It was concluded that the skincare routine could be used by rosacea sufferers with sensitive facial skin and persistent facial redness. It was also found that the pigmented products (containing liquorice) had very good redness-neutralizing properties and reduced erythema extra time.
Liquorice as one of several active ingredients.
Abstracts sometimes don’t include all the active ingredients. An example is a trial involving 246 people and Chrysanthellum Indicum Cream, the full text of the journal article shows the cream contained the following active ingredients; Borage Oil, Cypress Liquorice Extract, Solomon’s Seal, Mimosa Tenuiflora, Arnica, Shea Butter, almond oil, Golden Camomile – Chrysanthellum Indicum (Sicobel patented)
Digestive Enzymes
Some people with rosacea are more expected to have indigestion, especially after eating fatty foods. One study found a deficiency of the pancreatic enzyme lipase, which helps digest fat. When rosacea patients inclined pancreatic enzyme supplements with their meals, symptoms of indigestion and rosacea both improved.
Apple cider vinegar taken orally is used as a home remedy for rosacea and is thought to stimulate the release of digestive enzymes and help correct the bacterial balance in the intestines. Consult a doctor before trying apple cider vinegar or similar ‘home remedies, it’s available in liquid and tablet form and there have been reports linking use of the tablets with permanent esophageal injury, typically when they’ve become enclosed the throat.
B-complex vitamin*
Use caution if taking vitamin B as there are reports that rosacea can actually be caused by high doses of this vitamin, e.g. ‘A 17-year-old girl suddenly developed rosacea fulminans. She had begun taking vitamin B supplements 2 weeks before the onset. Her daily intake of vitamin B6 was 4000% and vitamin B12 was 2000% of the recommended daily allowance; and ‘an eruption resembling acne rosacea that was temporarily associated with daily ingestion of high-dose B vitamin.
A lack of riboflavin caused by a bad diet may be associated with rosacea. There’s evidence that rosacea patients have a higher concentration of microscopic skin mites on their face, and this may allow bacteria to thrive. It appears that the mites are unable to thrive on a person who’s a high intake of riboflavin.
This doesn’t mean that a person who’s rosacea should have a high intake of riboflavin, as everyone has these mites; a person with rosacea should be sure that they’ve the recommended daily intake. They can then carefully take a vitamin supplement as recommended by a chemist or doctor. Don’t take a high dose, consult your doctor.
Oatmeal
Powdered oatmeal is classified as skin protectant ingredient that “provides temporary skin protection and relieves minor skin irritation and itching due to poison oak, poison ivy, poison sumac, and insect bites.”
These properties get in beneficial for itchy and allergic conditions and as an ingredient for rosacea therapies. It’s a is a potent antipruritic (preventing or relieving itching) and this is helped because it’s moisturising properties that help dry skin. It also works as invite protectant providing a protective barrier, while proteins buffer both acids and bases.