Friday, September 5, 2008

Natural Skin Care

For those indulging in place a sunbathing - whether in the United Kingdom or, more probably, on holiday abroad - sunscreen is a necessity. There are natural and organic sunscreen available for those who want to avoid synthetic ingredients, many of which moisturize the skin through the aloe vera and protect through the vitamin E. Many primary sunscreen organic also contain caffeine, which helps the company skin.In an ideal world we would all be wise enough to satisfy the sun while already lathered up enough sun lotion to so that we do not get burned. For many reasons - asleep in the sun, resting on a beech, falling asleep in a field, for example - this is not always the case, and we find ourselves with painful, and downright dangerous sunburn. For those who like me take the red glow of raw shellfish rather than the pleasant golden glow of a Greek god after a session in the sun, there is plenty of natural and organic after the sunscreen. Of course, this is not a good idea to rely on the products after the sun instead of sun blocks, but use them to restore the skin after the sun can improve occasional burn the skin and relieve pain.

Organic after sun products are actually designed to rehydrate dry skin, so that a product with a moisturizer oil such as aloe vera, olive oil or sesame oil derivatives (which might appear on the product the list of ingredients as Sesamum indicum) will do. Those who have some tanning might want to observe for products in St Johns Wort and chamomile oil in that they help calm all surfaces burned and restored a tan uniform throughout the body. Unlike a growing trend towards organic and natural products after sun skin care, it has recently been research on corticosteroid creams which suggests that they are ineffective for treating sunburn, although they are often suggested that good news lotions for those products.

Corticosteroids, such as hydrocortisone and bethamethasone, are most commonly used by people with eczema and certain other skin diseases. Sunburn is actually a type of skin inflammation - the body recognizes the DNA damage that is caused by ultraviolet radiation from the sun and triggered several defense mechanisms, such as increasing the production of melanin to that UV-photons can be converted into heat undamaging - But it is unclear whether corticosteroids may help the body recover from exposure to the sun.

In a recent study, published in the Archives of Dermatology, researchers have treated a sample of volunteers with corticosteroid creams before UV and a sample group with the same creams 6 and 23 hours after exposure. It was found that volunteers who applied the cream before exposure suffered less pain sunburn, while those who had applied the cream after - as creams are intended to be used - had the same level of coups sun than the control group, suggesting that the creams are not effective after sun products.

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