Repair Skin Damage, Five Ways to do it

Repair Skin Damage

This article was originally posted on Higher Dose, and adapted for use as a guest post here on Loreeebee…

You might not wear your heart on your sleeve, but you definitely have an organ that is outward-facing. *Drum roll* Your skin.

As your body’s largest organ, your skin requires a lot of attention because it’s literally the body’s barrier, protecting you from external factors. Even though your skin is your body’s protector, external factors such as sun damage, stress, free radicals, poor nutrition, lack of sleep, pollutants, and the natural aging process all put wear and tear on our skin.

Even though our skin endures a lot every day, there are many ways to both repair and prevent further damage.

Here are our favorite ways to give your skin a healthy DOSE of TLC.

Self-Care to Repair Skin Damage

Multi-step self-care routines can seem daunting and unnecessary, but what if we told you they were actually essential for your skin’s health? With one-third of your body’s toxins being excreted through the skin, your skin is constantly working to help transport toxins out of your body to keep your system refreshed. Skin impurities like acne, rough texture, and poor complexion can be a result of buildup on your skin, so taking some extra time to detoxify your skin will help keep things popped, snatched, and glowing.

Step 1 | Detoxify

Detoxifying your skin starts with stimulating your lymphatic system and then pushing out toxins with a DOSE of infrared. A lymphatic facial helps to drain waste from the lymph system, promoting better circulation and less water retention. Following up a lymphatic drainage massage with an infrared sweat is the ultimate cleanse, clearing out buildup and increasing blood flow for a fresh face.

Step 2 | Fight Inflammation

When you apply heat to the skin, cold must follow. Therefore, post-sweat, opt for cold therapy to get the heat out of the skin and quell inflammation. Cryo facials are an excellent way to tone and tighten the skin while shrinking pores and strengthening your body’s immune response. If you don’t have access to a cryo facial, spend up to three minutes in a cold shower, or consider an ice roller that you keep in the freezer.

Step 3 | Nourish

Once the skin has detoxed, it’s time for restoration, rejuvenation, and recovery. Follow up any treatment with proper hydration and nourishment in the form of serums, creams, and oils that lock in moisture and keep inflammation down. Clean products that are high in antioxidants like vitamin C help support the skin’s recovery process, fight and prevent oxidative stress, and encourage collagen production.

Chill out with a Cryo Facial

Cryo facial is a type of cryotherapy that focuses on soothing, stimulating, and refreshing your complexion using cold temperatures to enliven the skin.

Rather than using exfoliating creams or chemical peels that can irritate the skin, a cryo wand is used to blow cold air on your face in concentrated, circulated motions. The freezing temps and vaporized liquid nitrogen instantly shrink enlarged, oily pores and increase circulation to your face, leaving you with a fresh-faced, cool glow. These facials also encourage collagen regrowth and cell repair — giving you long-term anti-aging protection.

Get a Face-full of LED

Immerse your skin in the benefits of blue, red, and near-infrared LED light energy.

The sun emits a full spectrum of light to help our bodies function throughout the day. While blue light signals cortisol production to help us be more productive, red and infrared light suppress cortisol and increase melatonin to promote better restoration and recovery.

However, because most of our jobs keep us indoors and exposed to artificial blue light from our screens AM to PM, our bodies stay in a prolonged state of stress. More stress means less melatonin, which means worse sleep and inflamed skin.

This mood-enhancing, skin-restoring treatment provides the skin with healing light sources, taking no longer than 30 minutes. Near-infrared LED light energy stimulates cells to regenerate and heal, leaving you with an even skin tone, a clearer complexion, and fewer wrinkles. Plus, it’s a great way to de-stress by stepping away from your screens to give those frown lines a break!

Repair Skin Damage with a Microcurrent Facial

Your body isn’t the only thing that needs a workout.

Microcurrent technology, which is touted as the ultimate non-invasive facelift, can be used from head to toe to tone and tighten skin from the inside out.

Using low-voltage current, microcurrent sends frequency deep to stimulate the muscle as well as promote cell growth in the skin. Similar to physical exercise, this facial / body workout activates the lymphatic system, encouraging proper drainage aka no facial puffiness or water retention. Microcurrent, which is virtually painless, also oxygenates the skin, invigorating the proteins that signal repair and ease inflammation.

Not only are results immediate but long-term treatment can undo fine lines and wrinkles and keep the skin smooth without paralyzing the muscle (like Botox and other injectables).

Read the labels

There are many, many beauty products out there that claim to prevent and reverse skin damage. How do you know which ones work?

Always look for clean ( with no endocrine-disrupting ingredients) beauty products like:

  • Niacinamide to minimize dark spots and hyperpigmentation.
  • Azelaic acid to lighten dark spots from acne and repair sun damage.
  • Topical retinoids like Vitamin A in these products reduces fine lines and improves skin texture.
  • Vitamin C to improve collagen production and boosts skin firmness.
  • Alpha hydroxy acids (AHAs) to reduce hyperpigmentation

And, of course, drink lots of water, wear a long-lasting (natural) SPF, and eat lots of antioxidant-rich whole foods. Your skin will thank you.

Show us what you’re doing to take care of your skin by tagging us on Instagram @higherdose.

This article was originally posted on HigherDOSE.com

Gluten Intolerance, 10 Signs

gluten intolerance

This article from MINDBODYGREEN.COM, was one of the first I read on the subject years ago when I first suspected I suffered from gluten intolerance.  I thought then that it had some good information, worth passing on.  It now bears repeating as much of it still applies. I have modified it slightly to fit in here on my blog:

More than 55 diseases have been linked to gluten, the protein found in wheat, rye, and barley. It’s estimated that 99% of the people who have either gluten intolerance or celiac disease are never diagnosed.

It is also estimated that as much as 15% of the US population is gluten intolerant. Could you be one of them?

If you have any of the following symptoms it could be a sign that you have gluten intolerance:

1.  Digestive issues such as gas, bloating, diarrhea, and even constipation, with constipation particularly in children after eating gluten.

2.  Keratosis Pilaris, (also known as ‘chicken skin’ on the back of your arms). This tends to be a result of a fatty acid deficiency and vitamin A deficiency secondary to fat malabsorption caused by gluten damaging the gut.

3.  Fatigue, brain fog, or feeling tired after eating a meal that contains gluten.

4.  Diagnosis of an autoimmune disease such as Hashimoto’s thyroiditis, rheumatoid arthritis, ulcerative colitis, lupus, psoriasis, scleroderma, or multiple sclerosis.

5.  Neurologic symptoms such as dizziness or feeling of being off-balance.

6.  Hormone imbalances such as PMS, PCOS, or unexplained infertility.

7.  Migraine headaches.

8.  Diagnosis of chronic fatigue or fibromyalgia. These diagnoses simply indicate your conventional doctor cannot pinpoint the cause of your fatigue or pain.

9.  Inflammation, swelling, or pain in your joints such as fingers, knees, or hips.

10.  Mood issues such as anxiety, depression, mood swings, and ADD.

 

How to Test for Gluten Intolerance

The single best way to determine if you have an issue with gluten is to perform an elimination diet where you would take it out of your diet for at least 3 weeks and then reintroduce it. Please note that gluten is a very large protein and it can take months and even years to clear from your system so the longer you can eliminate it from your diet before reintroducing it, the better.

The best advice is that if you feel significantly better off of gluten or feel worse when you reintroduce it, then gluten is likely a problem for you.  In order to get accurate results from this testing method, you must eliminate 100% of the gluten from your diet.

How to Treat Gluten Intolerance

Eliminating gluten 100% from your diet means 100%. Even trace amounts of gluten from cross-contamination or medications or supplements can be enough to cause an immune reaction in your body.  The 80/20 rule or “we don’t eat it in our house, just when we eat out” is a complete misconception. Research has shown that for those with celiac disease or gluten sensitivity eating gluten just once a month increased the relative risk of death by 600%.

My Intolerance of Wheat

Many of these facts remain relevant today, almost twenty years later.  I myself have been eating gluten-free for almost ten years.  I say gluten-free although I was diagnosed with an intolerance to wheat, not gluten.  Gluten-free is wheat-free, but not vice versa, so I say gluten-free when eating outside of my home. 

Occasionally I “cheat” and consume something with a bit of wheat in it, but usually regret it later with stomach cramps and diarrhea, depending on just how much wheat I consumed.  I know I probably should not do that, but it does keep me eating healthy.  This cheating is not recommended for someone with celiac disease or a sensitivity stronger than mine. 

photo credit to Polina Zimmerman on Pexels.com

Type Three Diabetes: Memory Loss

type three diabetes

Have you heard of type three diabetes? I had not until I was recently researching the effects of food consumption on memory decline and loss. Apparently, sugar has now been implicated in dementia, not just diabetes and heart disease. If you or someone you love is plagued with memory loss and/or subtle speech impairment such as mispronouncing or forgetting words, read on!

The Evolution of Sugar

Way back, humans used taste as a defense mechanism, in fact, animals still do. Sweet-tasting plants, berries etc meant they were healthy, ripe, and edible while sour or bitter food sources often meant they were poisonous.

Sugar is necessary in our diets for brain function as glucose (sugar) provides the fuel for energy. The problem is, we only need twenty-four grams, or six teaspoons, daily for optimal brain function. Most people consume much more than that!

Our food has changed dramatically over the last few decades with sugar added to enhance the taste of most packaged items. With busier lives, and convenience a priority, we tend to purchase and consume more of these sugar-laden packaged foods, instead of opting for fresh, sugar-free produce.

Brains Hoard Excess Sugar

Anything more than that six teaspoons daily is literally hoarded in the brain in the form of a crystalized sugar coating on our neurons. Neurons are the nerve cells in the brain. This coating causes the neurons to become brittle so they cannot function properly, creating irritability and brain fog. Long-term overconsumption leads to memory loss. For this reason, dementia is now referred to as type three diabetes.

Foods to Avoid

Unfortunately, neurons are the only cells that cannot regenerate but they can be repaired with a better, sugar-reduced diet. This list from the college of naturopathic medicine (CNM) tells you which foods to avoid to reverse or prevent type three diabetes:

  • Refined carbohydrates including pasta, bread, pastries, pizza, pies, cakes due to their high sugar content. Wholemeal carbohydrates (wholemeal pasta, bread) can be eaten in small amounts.
  • Snacks (including those marketed as healthy) such as chips, chocolate, and cakes. Granola/energy/protein bars, crackers, and pretzels are high in sugar and damaged oils which are not good for brain health.
  • Artificial sweeteners (especially aspartame) as they are made with chemicals and ingredients such as phenylalanine that have been linked to behavioral and cognitive issues. Phenylalanine is able to cross the blood-brain barrier and disrupt neurotransmitter production (these are the chemical messengers used by the nervous system). 
  • Sugary drinks including juices, fizzy drinks, energy drinks, and sports drinks. They all contain huge amounts of sugar which is detrimental for brain health as it causes inflammation in the brain which contributes to memory loss. Another ingredient in many of these drinks is a sweetener called high-fructose corn syrup. The body does not metabolize fructose well so consuming large amounts of it can lead to diabetes, insulin resistance, high blood pressure, and obesity, all of which can increase your risk of dementia. Instead, drink filtered water, with lemon or cucumber to give it more taste. Avoid sparkling water as it can negatively impact digestion, bone health, and teeth due to its acidity.
  • High-sugar fruits such as mangoes, lychees, passionfruit, and cherries should only be eaten in small amounts. It’s much better to stick to low-sugar fruits including strawberries, blueberries, raspberries, kiwi fruit, and grapefruit.
  • Hydrogenated oils (also known as trans fats) are a type of unsaturated fat found in refined vegetable oils (such as rapeseed oil), margarine, baked products (muffins, pizza, cookies, cakes, pastries, doughnuts, sausage rolls), microwave popcorn, shortening, fried foods (fries, hamburgers, battered fish), coffee creamers, chips, and crackers. Trans fats are linked to cognitive decline and reduced memory. They can also increase your risk of Alzheimer’s disease.
  • Ready-made meals and packaged/ processed foods including sauces and condiments, instant noodles, pizzas, deli meats and hams, savoury snacks, breakfast cereals, baked beans, spaghetti hoops, and tinned soups. These foods are high in sugar and salt, and often contain hydrogenated oils; all of which negatively affect brain health. Processed foods reduce the production of a brain-derived molecule called neurotrophic factor (BDNF) which is responsible for long-term memory, learning, and the growth of new brain cells.
  • Pasteurized dairy products including milk, yogurt, and cheese can negatively affect the gut (and therefore brain health) as dairy is both acidic and inflammatory.
  • Certain types of fish including tuna, shark, swordfish, and king mackerel as they contain high levels of mercury which is a heavy metal. Mercury accumulates in the body and gets stored in the brain, liver, and kidneys. In pregnant women, mercury accumulates in the placenta and fetus. It is a neurotoxin that causes havoc to the central nervous system and damage to the brain.
  • Alcohol is very inflammatory and causes certain metabolic changes in the body. When drunk in large amounts, alcohol can damage the nerve cells of the brain (neurons), making it difficult for brain cells to communicate. This can lead to memory loss and issues with eyesight and balance.
  • Coffee is a nervous system stimulant that triggers the stress response in the body. It can surge adrenaline and cortisol production which increases heart rate and blood pressure, and the release of glucose (sugar) into the bloodstream. Drinking coffee can interrupt sleep, negatively affect blood sugar levels and contribute to anxiety. Try a coffee alternative such as chicory root coffee (caffeine-free), turmeric latte, or ginger tea.

Foods to Consume

The CNM also recommends the following brain-boosting herbs:

  • Gingko biloba. …
  • Gotu kola. …
  • Bacopa monnieri.
  • Rosemary. …
  • Cayenne pepper.

A probiotic diet has been shown to clean out the sugar crystals that coat neurons in the brain. That’s due to the important connection between the brain and the gut which are connected by the vagus nerve running from the brain through the gastrointestinal system to the adrenal glands. In other words, a healthy gut means a healthy brain. Probiotics improve the health of your gut; just be sure to research the type of probiotic you use as many are destroyed by the acid in our stomachs. There are supplements available that dissolve in your mouth instead.

Probiotics such as Kimchi or Korean cabbage have been said to regulate sugar in the brain due to that important connection above. According to Healthline, other common probiotic foods include yogurt, sauerkraut, miso, (a salty, Japanese seasoning made from fermented soybeans), kombucha (fermented green or black tea), pickles fermented in salt (but not made with vinegar), traditional (but not cultured) buttermilk, and some types of cheese, mainly gouda, mozzarella, and cheddar.

Also from CNM, is this list of foods to eat to improve brain function including memory and concentration:

  • Blueberries are high in polyphenols which are beneficial for gut bacteria and cognitive function.
  • Broccoli neutralizes carcinogenic toxins in the body and helps lower the risk of neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease.
  • Leafy greens (kale, spinach, rocket) are rich in essential B vitamins, vitamins E and K, and an abundance of minerals that support brain health and improve memory and focus.
  • Pumpkin seeds and sunflower seeds contain antioxidants and minerals including magnesium, zinc, iron, and copper to protect the brain from free radical damage. Sunflower seeds are also rich in thiamine (B1), an important vitamin for memory and cognition.
  • Brazil nuts contain anti-inflammatory properties to protect the brain from damage. They are also high in selenium which is needed for brain signaling pathways.
    *Nuts and seeds are best soaked overnight for at least 7 hours as it activates enzymes within the nuts and seeds to aid absorption and enable better digestion. Discard the water afterward.
  • Food high in omega-3 fatty acids such as chia seeds, flaxseeds, walnuts, and small oily fish like sardines or mackerel. Omega-3 is essential for brain health as it enables brain cells to communicate better, reduces inflammation and aids cognitive development in children, and improved memory in adults.
  • Bananas are rich in tryptophan which converts to serotonin in the body to help support healthy gut function and mood.
  • Turmeric contains curcumin, a powerful compound with anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties which has shown to cross the blood-brain barrier to help brain cells grow, reduce mental decline, and improve memory and mood.
  • Whole grains including oats, quinoa, buckwheat, barley, and millet contain an abundance of B vitamins and other minerals to reduce inflammation in the brain and improve cognitive function.
  • Beans and pulses (lentils, chickpeas, kidney beans) are high in fiber, B vitamins, and omega-3. They provide a steady supply of fuel (glucose) to the brain which aids concentration and memory.
  • Coconut oil, 20g per day, improves memory, and cognitive performance (even Alzheimers) due to medium chain triglycerides, fatty acids that fuel the brain with energy.
type three diabetes

Tips to Improve Memory

Research has suggested that if you clench your right hand when learning a new fact (like someone’s name), later you can clench your left hand to remember the fact (name) Huh, I will have to try that.

Conclusions

If you suffer from sugar cravings, your body is probably already hoarding sugar. Start paying attention to the added sugar you are consuming and try to reduce it.

Cleansing of the neurons may take up to six months but if you are already noticing the early signs of memory loss, or speech impairment (type three diabetes) don’t hesitate to change your habits.

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