Top Nutrients and Foods for Great Skin by Anne Lemons

 

nutrients and foods for great skin

Keeping your skin looking great and improving conditions such as acne, wrinkles, rosacea, and dry skin can be as easy as getting the right nutrients in your diet. There are several key nutrients and foods that are known to help improve the appearance of your skin.

Your skin provides a protective function and is a great indication of internal health. Healthy skin creates a barrier system to protect the body from external factors such as toxins, bacteria, and UV light. The skin is also a major organ of detoxification. Therefore, it’s important to keep in mind that what is happening on the skin surface may be an indication of what is happening on a deeper level. This may include problems with digestion or detoxification as well as nutrient deficiencies.

We can protect our skin and help improve its appearance by getting some of these important nutrients through food every day. These diet choices along with a healthy lifestyle can help keep your skin healthy and looking great! Remember to also get plenty of sleep, drink clean water, exercise, and minimize stress.

Eat foods rich in:

Vitamin A

– Vitamin A helps cell turnover in the skin and improves immune function. Deficiencies in Vitamin A can result in a dry, flaky complexion.

Foods: apricots, cantaloupe, carrots, chili peppers, cod liver oil, collard greens, egg yolks, dandelion greens, grass-fed butter, ghee, kale, leafy greens, liver, spinach, and sweet potatoes

Vitamin C

– Vitamin C is a powerful anti-oxidant that is important for the production of healthy collagen. It also protects against wrinkles and sun damage.

Foods: bell peppers, citrus, dark leafy greens, camu camu powder, broccoli, brussel sprouts, kiwi, strawberries, grapefruit, Incan berries, cantaloupe, cranberry, cherry, red bell peppers

nutrients and foods for great skin• Vitamin E – Vitamin E is an anti-oxidant so this also helps protect that barrier system against the effects of the sun and the environment.

Foods: nuts, olives, spinach, almonds, sweet potato, avocado, wheat germ, sunflower seeds, butternut squash

Zinc

– Helps to improve immune function and wound healing, protects against UV radiation and helps decrease inflammation. It is especially good for acne, which can also be a symptom of Zinc deficiency.

Foods: kidney, liver, red meat, oysters, shellfish, scallops, and pumpkin seeds, ginger, pecans, brazil nuts, oats, and eggs

Essential Fatty Acids (EFA’s) Omega 3’s

– EFA’s help to retain water in the skin and plump it up. They also help decrease inflammation in the body and skin for conditions like rosacea and increase skin repair. EFA’s are often deficient in acne conditions. The body cannot produce its own EFAs so these must be obtained through the diet or in supplement form.

Foods: fatty fish like salmon, sardines, tuna, trout, mackerel, herring, white fish, sturgeon. Plant sources include ground flaxseed or flaxseed oil, chia seeds, pumpkin seeds, walnuts, and leafy greens (although plant sources are not considered the best source because they don’t convert well to the critical nutrients you need).

nutrients and foods for great skin

Collagen

– Helps promote skin healing, increases skin hydration and improves skin softness and tone. It provides anti-aging benefits by helping to decrease wrinkles and reverse skin damage.

Collagen peptides also help to improve the hair and nails. Bone broth is a great way to incorporate collagen into your diet. Drink grass-fed organic beef or chicken bone broth, 1-2 cups daily or add grass-fed collagen peptides to your morning smoothie shake.

Selenium

– An anti-oxidant that helps with tissue elasticity and protects the skin from UV light. Food sources are seafood such as tuna and salmon, garlic, brazil nuts, eggs, brown rice, and whole-wheat bread. Brazil nuts are a great source but most people only need 2 nuts a day for adequate selenium intake.

 

nutrients and foods for great skin

Probiotics

– Provide beneficial bacteria for the gut which can help clear up the skin, especially helpful for improving acne. These can be found in supplemental form but also from fermented food products like kefir, kimchi, sauerkraut and other fermented vegetables.

As you can see, just getting more fruits and vegetables, nuts, seeds, healthy fats, and good bacteria through fermented foods can go a long way to greater looking skin! One caveat though, you will not get the great results you are looking for if you are still eating inflammatory foods like sugar, alcohol, dairy, and gluten. You may want to try cutting down on these or work with someone like a nutritionist or functional medicine practitioner to help guide you through the process.

 

nutrients and foods for great skin  508-561-6050      nutrients and foods for great skin annelemonspt@gmail.com  

nutrients and foods for great skinannelemonswellness.com

SUMMER MUST-HAVES!

 oil control products

 

Extra oil, shiny skin, more breakouts? All of this happens because our skin produces more oil in the summer. Here are few must-have oil control products that are going to make your summer skin more manageable.

Glo Therapeutics Purifying Gel Cleanser:

Purifies skin without stripping away natural moisture. Salicylic Acid deeply cleanses pores while antioxidants protect and soothe the skin.

Glo Therapeutics Refining Mask:

Oil-absorbing clay purifies skin and calms irritation while proven blemish fighting ingredients reduce the appearance of pores and refine skin’s texture.

Glo Therapeutics Clear Complexion Pads:

Gently breaks down excess sebum, immediately balancing oily skin while helping prevent the growth of acne-causing bacteria.

Glo Therapeutics Solar Shade SPF 50:

It absorbs quickly, providing broad spectrum protection to shield against sun damage and prevent photoaging, it helps to preserve a youthful appearance.

For your convenience shop online or stop by to our Skin Studio in Brighton.

Our experienced skin care therapists recommend having monthly skin care treatments. Skin treatments are great for cleaning pores and aid in controlling breakouts. Schedule your free skin care consultation today.

Stay hydrated, reapply SPF, enjoy your summer!

 

 

Active and Inactive Ingredients

How many times have you looked at the label and wondered what is the difference between active and inactive ingredients? Whether it’s a skin care product or a household cleaner the definition of active and inactive ingredients is the same.

Active ingredients have an effect and carry out an action, for example glycolic acid is a powerful exfoliant with cell renewal properties. Inactive ingredients deliver the active ingredients, act as a preservative and make the product appealing to the eye. 

One of the keys to keep your skin youthful is to make sure all the active ingredients are absorbed by your skin. Have you noticed that during your facial treatment your esthetician massages and steams your skin? Those steps are necessary to stimulate and heat the tissue for maximum absorption.

To illustrate active and inactive ingredients in action let’s look at our Simple Treatment. It’s a customized cleansing facial that includes essential steps to aid in maintenance of healthy skin with relaxing massage of the face, neck and shoulders that will rejuvenate you. This facial treatment consists of:

A. Pumpkin Enzyme Scrub that removes dead skin cell build up and stimulates cell regeneration with granules and enyzmes that exfoliate without stress or irritation to the skin. List of active ingredients includes: Date Seeds & Jojoba Beads that provide natural, gentle physical exfoliation without stress to the skin; Rice Extract is an exfoliant that is moisturizing, conditioning, and soothing; Sphingolipids are fatty molecules that help protect cell surfaces against harmful environmental factors. List of inactive ingredients includes: Stearic Acid that helps water and oils mix; Cetyl Alcohol that makes product foam, Xanthan Gum helps with consistency.

B. Depending on your skin type soothing gel mask or refining mask is final step in the treatment:

Soothing Gel Mask cools and calms sensitive or irritated skin with a soothing complex of antioxidants and vitamins. List of active ingredients includes: Calendula Extract a flower extract rich in antioxidants, also soothing and calming; Wild Yam Extract is an antioxidant with anti-wrinkle proporties; Vitamin E is an antioxidant that heals and repairs. List of inactive ingredients include: Glycerin is a syrup-like ingredient that improves skin elasticity and protects skin against irritation; Niacinamide is a water-soluble form of Vitamin B3, that improves circulation in the skin, reducing the appearance of wrinkles; Retinyl Palmitate increases skin’s collagen production.

Refining Mask is a oil-absorbing clay mask that purifies skin and calms irritation while proven blemish fighting ingredients reduce the appearance of pores and refine skin’s texture. List of active  ingredients includes: Sulfur used for acneic skin due to its healing, antibacterial and oil balancing properties with cell-regenerating functions; Zinc is an antibacterial that used to boost the immune system at the cellular level and accelerate healing of wounds; Tea Tree is essential oil antimicrobial and anti-bacteria properties that helps fight acne. List of inactive ingredients includes: Caprylic/Capric Triglyceride that derived from coconut oil, it keeps skin hydrated and gives products liquid feel so they can glide on skin more gently; Bentonite is a type of absorbent clay, ideal for people with oily skin; Dimethicone is a silicone that locks moisture into skin and prevents bacteria from entering skin.

The professional products we use at Skin Care Studio by Irina in Brookline have a higher percentage of active ingredients that deliver desired results faster, while products sold at drug stores may have the same active ingredients but only half of the amount thus they work slower.

Make your facial treatment appointment today and we will tell you all about active and inactive ingredients in each for the products we use in your treatment!