Monterey Herald

Put on your best face

- Barbara Quinn

I didn’t like being called “freckle face” when I was a kid. So when my mom took me to the pediatrici­an for a routine checkup, I asked him if he could make my freckles go away. He kindly told me he could, “but you will never be able to go out in the sun again or your freckles will come back.” So I got used to being “freckle face.”

Freckles may be the least of our skin worries as we grow older. Like it or not, gravity tugs our skin downward each decade after the age of 35 or so. And there is really no such thing as anti-aging. The best we can do is to age well, according to dermatolog­ist Dr. Raja Sivamani at a recent webinar sponsored by the Almond Board of California (yes, almonds can be good for our skin).

I was fascinated with the photos Dr. Sivamani showed us that compared the faces of 60-something identical twins. One was a non-smoker. The other a smoker. Can we influ

ence the rate that our skin shows the signs of aging? Definitely, yes!

Smoking, for example, puts a tremendous amount of oxidative stress on the skin. The result: A face that ages rapidly.

“Photoaging” is the damage to our skin caused by sun exposure. It shows up in the form of wrinkles, dark spots and leathery skin.

Besides not smoking and the dedicated use of sunscreen, we can also protect our skin from the inside out with certain

nutrient components, says Dr. Sivamani.

Carotenoid­s — various color pigments in plants — are photoprote­ctive, for example. That means they work like a sunscreen to guard against sun damage. These carotenoid­s include lycopene, the pigment that makes tomatoes and watermelon red, beta carotene that gives orange and green color to carrots, sweet potatoes, kale and other greens and astaxanthi­n (asta-zanthin), a lesser-known carotenoid responsibl­e for the reddish pigment in salmon and other marine animals.

While Dr. Sivamani advocates certain dietary

supplement­s to achieve healthier skin, he says eating whole food sometimes has a better impact.

Almonds are a good example. They offer a good source of dietary fiber (fiber feeds the good bacteria in our gut that can promote healthy skin, believe it or not) and vitamin E, which helps protect our skin from the damaging effects of the sun. One recent clinical trial found that older men and women had slower wrinkle developmen­t after eating a handful of almonds every day for 4 months.

No, there is no magic formula that will stop our skin from its downward sag. But each time we put on sunscreen, consume healthful foods or choose not to smoke, we help slow down the aging process. Now is the time to start, says Dr. Sivamani. Our choices over time can help us put our best faces forward.

Barbara Quinn-Intermill is a registered dietitian nutritioni­st affiliated with the Community Hospital of the Monterey Peninsula. She is the author of “QuinnEssen­tial Nutrition: The Uncomplica­ted Science of Eating.” Email her at barbara@quinnessen­tialnutrit­ion.com.

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