Title: Healthy Skin Care 101
1Healthy Skin Care 101
- The Approach to Good Nutrition
- What your skin needs internally for the optimum
healthy glow
Rebekah Kelley, HHC, AADP Eat.Live.Thrive!
2Areas to be covered
- Origins of Problem Skin/Skin Communication
- The Skin Organ Eliminating Toxins
- Skin Imbalances What can you do?
- Hormones
- Digestive Health
- Diet Imbalances
- Environment
- Feed Your Skin
- Supplements
- Good Skin Checklist
- Resources
3What causes problem skin?
- Factors that contribute to acne and other problem
skin issues include heredity, oily skin,
hormonal imbalance, monthly menstrual cycles, and
candidiasis (digestive imbalance). - Other contributing factors can be allergies,
stress, certain types of drugs, steroids,
lithium, oral contraceptives, and some
anti-epileptic drubs. - Nutritional deficiencies and or diets high in
saturated fats and hydrogenated fats. - Exposure to industrial products/or other
environmental hazards are some of the things that
can effect skin. - If body pH that is too acidic or too alkaline
also fosters the nesting and breeding of
acne-causing bacteria (do a pH urine test to
determine).
4How your skin communicates
- Your skin is the barometer of your health and
wellbeing, you can tend to the larger health
issues by eating right - Problem skin is a message from your body that
something may be wrong with your body chemistry,
diet, or skin care routine. - Proper diet, nutritional supplements and skin
care routine may be all that is needed to correct
the problem.
5Skin Is the Largest Body Organ
- In fact some doctors call the skin the third
kidney. Flushing out toxins is a key factor
behind many skin disorders including acne. For
the average adult skin can reach up to 20 square
feet of skin. - Sweating of its jobs is to eliminate a portion
of the bodys toxic waste products through
sweating. - Assists Kidney Liver If the body has more
toxins than the kidneys and liver can effectively
discharge, then the skin takes over. As toxins
escape through the skin the skins health
integrity is disrupted. - Toxin Elimination A sluggish colon can cause
disruption of the skin.
6What can you do to help your skin eliminate
toxins?
- Exercise, or other healthy things that make you
sweat. - Decrease caffeine, alcohol, nicotine, eliminate
the bad fats, environmental pollution, excess
cholesterol, (all broken down and sometimes
stored in your liver), - Minimize or find alternatives for over the
counter medications that have to be processed in
your liver - Drink plenty of water to assist in flushing
toxins out of your body. - Make sure things are moving at least 1-3x day.
7Skin issue may reflect Imbalances in Hormones
- Have your hormone levels checked, to see if this
is an issue. - Decrease/Eliminate Dairy Dermatologist F.W.
Danby, MD, writes in the 2005 study that milking
pregnant cows unavoidably results in "taking the
hormones into your diet as milk, cream, ice
cream, butter, cheese, yogurt, pizza, lasagna,
cheeseburgers" and "the hormones being absorbed
into your body, going to the oil gland receptors,
converting to DHT, and turning on the cellular
activity that creates acne." - Organic dairy products contain significantly
fewer hormones and less iodine, but they still
have small quantities of both. If you're prone to
breakouts, try eating soy- or rice-based "dairy"
products and see if your complexion improves.
8Skin issues may reflect Imbalances in Digestive
Health
- Proper levels of Hydrochloric Acid and intestinal
bacterial is critical - Acidophilus replenishes essential bacteria to
reduce outbreaks - Test your elimination efficiency by doing a stool
transit test - Bad breath can be an indication of poor digestive
health - Elimination at least 1-3x daily for those on a
whole foods diet.
9Skin issues may reflect Imbalances in Diet
- Lots of raw veggies. Helps clean the blood and
thus the skin. Also it gets the best nutrition
(vitamins, minerals, enzymes) to the skin. - Elaine Wilkes, a Los Angeles-based nutritionist,
recommends drinking one to two veggie smoothies a
day. "Fresh green juices create radiant skin,"
she says. "There's a reason why celebrities
'juice' before an event. The chlorophyll and
vitamins in the greens nourish the blood, which
in turn nourishes your skin."
10Skin issues may reflect Imbalances in Diet
- Eat fresh fruits rich in alpha-hydroxy acids
(AHAs) like grapes, strawberries, pineapple.
These acids help to exfoliate skin by removing
the dead skin cells that clog the oil glands. - Note that canned juices and fruit do not fulfill
this category, no enzymes and nutrition is
decreased in processed, considered a sugar by the
body.
11Skin issues may reflect Imbalances in Diet
- Zinc Deficiency
- Eat foods rich in zinc like, whole grains,
sunflower seeds, small amounts of raw nuts daily.
- Zinc is an antibacterial agent and necessary
element in the oil producing glands of the skin. - A diet low in zinc may cause flare ups.
12Skin issues may reflect Imbalances in Diet
- Be sure your diet contains foods rich in Vitamins
A, C, E, and essential fatty acids. - Eggs, liver, sweet potatoes, carrots, mangoes,
spinach, cantaloupe, and dried apricots can help
keep your vitamin A level high. - Flax seeds, Brazil nuts, sesame seeds, avocados,
some dark leafy green vegetables (kale, spinach,
purslane, mustard greens, collards, etc.),
salmon, all can help provide Essential Fatty
Acids (EFAs).
13Skin issues may reflect Imbalances in Environment
- Your skin absorbs the environment around you
- Be aware of what products you put on your skin
- Be aware of household and cleaning products
- Introduce Plants they clean the air (book)
- Be aware of dry cleaning chemicals air outside
before you wear them. - Do not microwave in plastics or saran
wrapchemicals leach from the plastics into the
food.
14Feed Your Skin
- How to stock the Healthy Skin Kitchen
- Nutrition dense and high quality
- Protein free range, hormonal free chicken or
turkey, Alaskan wild salmon - Good Fats Nuts, Fish, Olive Oil
- Antioxidant rich Vegetables Fruits
- Organic Beans Whole Grains
- Frozen Foods flash frozen veggies and fruits
with no additives for emergencies - Beverages water herbal and green teas
- Fresh herbs and spices
15Skin Supplements
- Acidophilus replenishes essential bacteria to
reduce outbreaks - Omegas Essential fatty acids (EFAs) keep skin
smooth and soft and repair tissue and dissolve
fatty deposits that block pores - Potassium deficiency has been associated with
acne - Zinc heals tissue and prevents scaring
- Garlic destroys bacteria, enhances immune
function
- Vitamin A/Beta Carotene antioxidant, strengthens
skin - Vitamin B complex anti stress, improves blood
flow to the skin - Vitamin C promotes immune function and reduces
inflammation - Vita D3 many of us are deficient, promotes
healing and tissue repair - Vitamin E antioxidant, healing and repair
16Good Skin Checklist
- Drink plenty of water.
- Make sure you have good digestive health
absorption. - Make sure you are elimination properly, 1-3x
daily. - Regular Exercise flushes your lymph system,
unblocks pores via sweat, gets out toxins. - Feed your skin from the healthy kitchen list.
- Eliminate processed foods (has no enzymes and
lots of preservatives for the liver to take care
of) and fried foods. - Eliminate foods and products that are known to
cause allergiestest to see if you are having a
reaction. - Aware of Environmental factors makeup, skin
care routine, shampoo conditioners, toxins in
environment. - Eliminate smoking, caffeine and alcohol give
your liver and kidneys a break from toxic
overload. - Make sure you are getting your basic skin
supplements and EFAs - Decrease your stress load and/or learn ways to
manage stress. - Balance body pH.
17Aging Premature Aging
- When new cells no longer replace the ones who
have died or suffer damage. - As we age our bodies do not assimilate as many
nutrients. - Our systems slows down and become less efficient
- Repair and regeneration of cells is vital.
- Many researchers say that there is no reason to
age, that it is diet and lifestyle choices. - Make sure you get adequate amounts of protein,
- Digestive health and nutrition absorption is key,
- Make sure to address key supplement support for
cell regeneration.
18Age Spots
- A result of build up wastes, know as lipofuscin
accumulation, a byproduct of free radical damage
to skin cells. - Factors leading to age spots include, poor diet,
lack of exercise, smoking, poor liver function,
and in gestation of oxidized oils (fried food,
rancid raw nuts) over a period of time, and above
all, excessive sun exposure. - Also deficiency of a number of important
nutrients. including vitamin E, selenium
glutathione, chromium, and dimethylamino-ethonol
(DMAE).
- Eat a diet high in raw fruits and vegetables, at
least 50 of food intake. - Avoid caffeine, fried foods, saturated fats, red
meat, processed foods, sugar, tobacco. - Exercise, eliminate fried foods, increase
anti-oxidants, - Limit sun exposure
- Follow a fasting program to cleanse the liver and
rid the body of toxins, make sure this is done
while under the care of a professional.
19Dry Skin
- A balance of oil and moisture is critical for
healthy attractive skin. - Simple dry skin results from lack of natural
oils. - Complex dry skin results from lack of both oil
and moisture. - If eczema and psoriasis have been eliminated for
the cause of dry skin, heredity, vitamin
deficiencies and poor nutrition are the driving
cause.
- Make sure to drink enough water and take your
EFAs. - Avoid alcohol and caffeine these tend to be a
diuretic with skin - Vitamins A, E, B-Complex, and Zink are key.
- Be careful that you arent contributing to the
condition by using harsh products or
over-moisturizing.
20Eczema Psoriasis
- While too in-depth to go into as part of this
presentation, diet has been key in healing these
frustrating skin conditions, where typical
treatments have failed. - Current research has focused on building the
immune system is key success for issues with
psoriasis. - Although causes vary per individual, allergies to
foods has been key to many for Eczema.
21Resources
- The Perricone Prescription Nicholas Perricone, MD
- Your bodys many cries for water Dr. Fereydoon
Batmanghelidj - Prescriptions for Nutritional Healing Phyllis A
Balch, CNC - Digestive Wellness Elizabeth Lipski, PhD., CCN