Showing posts with label dehydration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dehydration. Show all posts

Monday, November 8, 2010

Essential Fatty Acids

Essential Fatty Acids are the building blocks of our bodies’ fats and membranes. They were originally known as Vitamin F.

Your body cannot manufacture EFA’s on its own so they must be gotten from your diet and/or from supplements. Good dietary sources of EFA’s are fresh wild salmon, sardines, and walnuts. Eat them twice a week. Try adding ground flax seeds to your salads. Supplemental sources are fish oil, cod liver oil, salmon oil, and flax oil. Take 2 tbsp. daily.

EFA’s help reduce inflammation, improve eczema and psoriasis, ease depression and anxiety, keep us hydrated and supple, and make our skin youthful and glowing!

Lack of Essential Fatty Acids results in EFAD – Essential Fatty Acid Deficiency.
EFAD can cause several problems with your skin, most notably, excess keratinization or a build up of dead skin cells which causes your skin to look dull and flakey. Micro-comedones and hyperpigmentation can also result from EFAD.

Lack of essential fatty acids in your skin increases the amount of water that evaporates from your skin (trans-epidermal water loss – TEWL). Increased TEWL results in less water in the skin which impairs the enzyme activity needed to desquamate or exfoliate dead skin cells. And impaired desquamation means more dead skin cells stuck to the outer epidermal layer (keratinization), as well as dead skin cells getting stuck in the pores and follicles causing micro-comedones.

EFA’s contain Omega 3 which helps restore collagen and elastin in the dermis, and Omega 6 which helps restore parts of the epidermis.

Friday, August 27, 2010

Dehydration

Perfect skin requires water.

Dehydration slows your metabolic rate.
Skin functions slow down.
Skin cell turnover rate decreases.
Sebum production decreases.
Healing rate of breakouts decreases.
Waste products from within the skin can't be flushed efficiently.
Normal elimination slows down and toxins buld up in the large intestine and colon.
A person who is overweight has a lower percentage of water in their body.
The increase in bodyfat that comes with being overweight reduces the amount of hydration in the body.
People who are overweight are constantly dehydrated, making it harder to lose excess pounds.
Swelling of the face can also be caused by inadequate water consumption.
Drink half your body weight in ounces each day.
Example: 200 lbs. drink 100 oz. or 12.5 glasses of water daily.