One of the most commonly asked questions in my office is “What eye cream do you recommend?”, I usually answer that it depends on what you are looking for. Do you have dark circles, bags, or fine lines?
In the past, I have recommended freezing green tea bags,thawing them with a little cold water and relaxing for 10 minutes with the tea bags on your eyes to help reduce eye puffiness. I have recommended human growth factors that you can find in Skin Medica’s TNS Night Eye Repair and Neocutis’ Lumiere as well as Renova for fine lines around the eyes. Dark circles, hmmmmmm…. in eight years of seeing patients and trying creams I have yet to find one that I LOVE for dark circles. Now I don’t have dark circles around my eyes, but plenty of my patients do. When they don’t come back in raving about what I have recommended, I stop recommending it. Last but not least, if your eyes are bothering you enough to depress you every single morning when you look in the mirror, sooner or later you will likely be consulting with a plastic surgeon about a blepharoplasty (which is a fantastic procedure) but in the meantime….
It looks like there is finally an eye cream on the market that claims to do all of the above. SKinCeuticals, a company known for their extraordinary antioxidant serums has just released A.G.E. Eye Complex.
This eye cream contains a complex of flavonoids and synergistic peptides that strengthen blood vessel walls, improve lymphatic drainage and eliminate hemoglobin’s colored end-products which ultimately greatly decreases dark circles and puffiness surrounding the eye. This all occurs in 4 – 12 weeks based on the company’s clinical studies(which have produced some pretty amazing pictures).
How does it work to reverse fine lines and wrinkles? These are big claims, but this is how they are doing it. By twelve weeks and beyond, blueberry extract interrupts the formation of advanced glycation end-products (A.G.E.) and Proxylane restores water and nutrient content to the dermal epidermal junction (D.E.J.) to increase skin elasticity and thickness for dramatic improvement of wrinkles and crow’s feet. Now you all know that I am a huge fan of human growth factors, but I sure am willing to give this a try, besides whose to say that I can’t apply human growth factors as well? I have been using it for a few weeks now and must say that I love the texture of the eye complex as well as the cooling sensation that I feel after applying it. I can’t wait to get some feedback from my patients on this new eye cream.
Tags: A.G.E., bags, dark circles, eye, eye cream, Human Growth Factors, Lumiere, Neocutis, new, nouricel, psp, Skin Medica, SkinCeuticals, SkinCeuticals A.G.E. Eye Complex, TNS, TNS Night Eye Repair, wrinkles
Posted in Skin Care News by Rachel Garcia PA-C : June 22, 2009 - 9:25pm | 5 Comments »
So, the summer is fast approaching and most of us are starting to pull out all of our old sunscreen bottles and thinking about buying more. Hopefully, my regular patients are already applying sunscreen on a daily basis at least to their face, neck, chest and hands. If you are not you should be, because if you don’t have brown spots yet, you will….and then you will be going to a dermatologist or plastic surgeon asking how to get rid of them. Let me assure you, it is not easy to get rid of those dreaded brown spots, I have lasered my back and chest multiple times, with good results and bad results. I wish that I had just worn sunscreen from the start. I can’t tell you how many times I have heard a patient say, “Well when I was young, they didn’t have sunsceen, we used baby oil and iodine.”. Now we do have sunscreen no more excuses. So what kind should you be using?
The key is this, make sure that whatever you use it is broad spectrum or says UVA/UVB coverage on the bottle. If it does not stop both types of rays, I am not going to waste my time applying it to my skin or my children’s skin. So what is the difference in these two types of rays? UVB light penetrates the skin and causes tanning, burning and skin cancer. UVA light comes right through glass windows and penetrates our skin more deeply than the UVB light. It’s effects on our skin are those that we associate with aging, wrinkling, dullness, discoloration and likely skin cancer as well.
Believe it or not over 50% of the sunscreens available to us at our local drugstores are not broad spectrum. Personally, I look for a few specific ingredients, if the sunscreen does not contain at least one of these ingredients, I will not use it.
Parsol 1789 (Avobenzone)
Helioplex
Mexoryl
Zinc Oxide
Titanium Dioxide
Avobenzone was developed in the late 1980s and was the first decent sunscreen to address UVA light but it breaks down in sunlight, it is not stable. Mexoryl and Helioplex are two recent chemical sunscreen advancements that address UVA light and remain stable for longer periods of time than Avobenzone does by itself. Titanium Dioxide and Zinc Oxide are physical blockers, sunblocks that physically shield your skin from the sun much like your clothing does. Thankfully newer micronized versions of these sunsceens have been invented which have made the application of some sunscreens much more cosmetically elegant.
How much should you use? One full shot glass, every two hours if you are out between the hours of 10 am to 4pm. Seem like a lot? Ask me that question again when I am giving you quotes for laser procedures to remove wrinkles and brown spots, or after a biopsy to rule out skin cancer on your nose.
In my next blog, I will break down each of the sunscreens sold on this site so that you know what their active ingredients are and what situations they are best used in.
Tags: Add new tag, aging, avobenzone, brown spots, children, helioplex, lasers, mexoryl, parsol 1789, skin cancer, sunblock, Sunscreen, titanium dioxide, uva, uvb, wrinkles, zinc oxide
Posted in Dermatology, Skin Care News, Sun Protection, Sunscreen by Rachel Garcia PA-C : May 26, 2009 - 8:58pm | 3 Comments »