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Tuesday, January 27, 2009

All about Alpha Hydroxy Acids in Anti Wrinkle Creams

By Julie Samtsonn

Use of Alpha Hydroxy Acids in anti wrinkle creams started to become extremely popular in the early 90's with concern about over exposure to the sun reaching a high. Alpha Hydroxy Acids are natural and found in certain milk products as well as various fruits. Due to their being a natural substance, it was always assumes that their use was perfectly safe. However, recently it has been thought that skin previously exposed to acid peels, whether they are natural or not, could possibly be more sensitive to UV rays and the risk of cancer associated with this exposure to the sun.

Wrinkles are a result of dry, dead skin cells that have shriveled and lost their plumpness. Alpha Hydroxy acid control methods remove the dead skin to give younger, new skin cells the chance to surface. These topical solutions take away the appearance of undesirable dead skin that natural aging has caused to lose its ability to lock in vitamins, elastin and collagen.

Repetitive facial gestures like squinting, smile lines, frown lines, eyebrow lines, are usually deeper in the skin and usually in the underlying muscles. This makes the skin cells form a ripple effect over time. Various topical anti-aging creams and anti-wrinkle creams, can be a short-term remedy as they will only affect upper levels of skin cell arrangements.

Basically, alpha hydroxy acids are an exfoliate, removing the outer, older, dead skin and making the underneath, alive skin cells surface, which do not show the finer lines that often first start to surface. Because some persons may be sensitive to the acid treatment, based on the ph of their skin, it may cause redness, blistering or itchiness, which may worsen the skin condition.

It is important to know whether this is a good method to chose for anti-aging creams or anti-wrinkle creams, based on the individual skin types. For somebody that already has dry skin, this could produce drier skin and cause more flakiness, when they may need a hydrating or moisturizing treatment instead. If you do not have a dermatologists suggestion to try alpha hydroxy acids, you may want to be sure that this is the proper method to try, instead of deep moisturizing treatments first.

A lot of the over-the-counter alpha hydroxy acid treatment solutions may come in the form of a microdemabrasion kit. This removes the thinner, outer layer of skin by applying a chemical peel, then followed by a neutralizer to stop any acid action. This is followed with a deep moisturizer, or anti-aging cream or anti wrinkle cream, depending on what product you like.

This treatment will give the appearance of younger skin, but is only a temporary fix. Prices will vary with all products and the saying 'you get what you pay for' does not necessarily apply to skin care. It is best to do some research into what works best, perhaps taking into account things like testimonials. Remember to stop if there is any redness, flakiness or itchiness that lasts more than 2 or 3 days.

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