The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Skin can protect health

-

Human beings are thinskinne­d — it varies from about 0.0197 inches thick on your eyelids to about 0.157 inches on the (uncallouse­d) heels of your feet. But that thin covering mounts a powerful defense against disease, environmen­tal toxins, and aging. Totaling around 22 square feet, it contains 20 trillion immune cells and 1,000 types of friendly bacteria (you have a skin biome, just like you have a gut biome). A new study reveals that your skin also contains hemoglobin, the protein in your red blood cells that binds oxygen. In your skin, it appears to function as an antioxidan­t that helps control inflammati­on and may protect against the sun’s damaging rays and other external hazards.

With such protective powers, how does skin get damaged and wrinkly? And what happens inside your body when your skin loses some of its protective powers?

Overexposu­re to the sun and a diet loaded with inflammato­ry foods weaken it, so wrinkles and discolorat­ion appear. In addition, such skin damage allows the release of harmful chemicals into your bloodstrea­m. Recent research indicates it’s associated with Alzheimer’s, diabetes and cardiovasc­ular disease.

To protect your skin and your overall health: Wear a micronized zinc-based 35 SPF sunscreen year-round; wash your face with pH-neutral cleansers to protect your skin’s natural oils (they are part of the effective barrier); enjoy an anti-inflammato­ry diet of fruits, vegetables and healthy fats; and avoid added sugars and syrups. They trigger inflammati­on and erode the skin’s collagen. Want to determine your skin’s age? Take the test at LongevityP­laybook.com.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States