Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
Beauty

Can you protect your skin from Collagen Loss?

Darpan News Desk IANS, 14 Feb, 2023 06:08 PM
  • Can you protect your skin from Collagen Loss?

Collagen is frequently mentioned in relation to the skin when individuals discuss its significance. That's because while though protein is found in every cell of the body, our skin contains a massive 70 per cent of it. Our skin is kept firm, lush, and youthful by collagen. As a result, when we start to lose it, the first signs are wrinkles and sagging, elastic-losing skin. i.e., your typical ageing symptoms. Collagen can also be damaged by external stresses like tobacco, UV radiation, pollution, and other reasons. Therefore, it is crucial to safeguard the collagen in our skin from a young age.

If healthy, glowing, younger-looking skin is your goal, here's what you need to do:

Vitamin C and retinoids

Vitamin C plays an important role in protecting the skin and creating additional collagen. By adding this vitamin to your diet, you can shield the collagen you already have while boosting your body's natural production. Slather on a vitamin C serum in the morning. You can also find vitamin C in broccoli, strawberries, papaya, leafy vegetables (spinach and kale), citrus fruits (oranges, limes, grapefruits). Retinoid/retinol are vitamin A derivatives that upregulate genes involved in collagen production. Apply a pea-size amount of retinol to your entire face every other night. Retinol boosts collagen production, promotes skin renewal, and brightens skin tone.

Peptides and chemical peels

Peptides, also called polypeptides, naturally occur in the skin, but they're also included in many skin care products - and for good reason. Peptides are amino acids that make up certain proteins needed by the skin. More specifically, collagen is made of three polypeptide chains, so adding peptides can stimulate your skin to make collagen. More collagen can lead to firmer, younger-looking skin. Additionally, chemical peels are a wonderful way to keep your skin looking and feeling revitalised and fresh. Chemical peels use hydroxy acids (like glycolic acid) to boost skin cell turnover. When skin grows back after a chemical peel, it triggers the production of collagen and elastin. This can help make your skin smooth, supple, and strong.

Sunscreen and antioxidants

Over-exposure from the sun's UVA rays can also hurt collagen stimulation. With frequent sunscreen application, you can protect your skin and maintain collagen production. Start by using a broad-spectrum SPF 30 or higher. Make sure to apply it more than once a day if you're likely to sweat it off in a few hours. Your skin also needs antioxidants to relieve inflammation and neutralise damaging free radicals. Antioxidant rich skincare products can stimulate your body's new collagen production while protecting your existing collagen. Also include foods such as apricots, asparagus, beets, broccoli, carrots, bell peppers, kale, mangos, pecans, berries, and spinach to your diet.

Supplements and a nutritious diet

Consider a diet that is mainly based on protein (lentils, beans, eggs, chicken, and fish), whole grains (brown rice, millets, quinoa, etc.), and healthy fats (olive oil, avocados, and coconut oil) along with fresh vegetables and fruits; as well as nuts and seeds. Foods that are processed, high in trans-fat, deep fried, high in sugar (fizzy drinks, biscuits, etc.) can diminish your internal glow and imbalance your hormones. Drink plenty of water to stay hydrated. Avoid smoking, cut back on alcohol, and limit caffeine intake. For supplements, collagen, zinc, coenzyme Q10 and peptides are some of the supplements that you may want to consider for skin elasticity.

Exercise and sleep well

When we exercise, we increase and improve blood circulation which delivers oxygen and nutrients to our skin. Once the oxygen and nutrients arrive, they assist skin cells in reproduction as well as feeding the fibroblast cells that produce collagen. Likewise, sleep is directly related to glowing skin and the creation of human growth hormone. It is during your sleep that your body and skin repair themselves. The production of skin proteins like collagen and elastin speed-up in your sleep. Make sure you get 7-9 hours of sleep every night.

Bio-remodelling

Providing hydration from the inside, bio-remodelling is a revolutionary treatment process that boosts the skin's own natural ability to make collagen and elastin, two of the most important components in a healthy, youthful skin. With the highest concentration of hyaluronic acid, it stimulates skin cell receptors to improve skin quality by restoring hydration and promoting radiance. Profhilo is a new breakthrough skin treatment designed to remodel multi-layer skin tissue. It improves ageing and sagging tissue by smoothing and tightening the skin. Besides the face, it can also be injected into neck, hands and other areas with high skin laxity.

MORE Beauty ARTICLES

World’s Oldest Barbershop Responds to Today’s Beard Trend

World’s Oldest Barbershop Responds to Today’s Beard Trend
  For Men's Grooming Day, Truefitt & Hill Launches Beard Range for the Modern Man

World’s Oldest Barbershop Responds to Today’s Beard Trend

The Magic of Stick Makeup

The Magic of Stick Makeup

Applying makeup with your fingers is entirely underrated. It’s utter joy – drawing on...

The Magic of Stick Makeup

Why Photoshop Them? Try Saffron, Apples To Get 'Real Armpits'

Why Photoshop Them? Try Saffron, Apples To Get 'Real Armpits'
Most women tend to get conscious of the way their armpits look. So, they try out various beauty hacks to whiten and smoothen them out. But what leads to darkening of armpits?

Why Photoshop Them? Try Saffron, Apples To Get 'Real Armpits'

AG HAIR Introduces Jet Black Dry Shampoo

AG HAIR Introduces Jet Black Dry Shampoo
The line is already made up of four "flavours," including Simply Dry Shampoo - which works on every hair colour, as well as Blonde, Light Brown and Brunette Dry Shampoo Root Touch-Ups.

AG HAIR Introduces Jet Black Dry Shampoo

What’s in a Sunscreen

What’s in a Sunscreen
Chemicals in non-mineral sunscreens are known to penetrate into the skin, potentially disrupting the hormone system. TheEWG reports that chemical sunscreens act as endocrine disruptors through estrogenic activity and cause issues with thyroid function and other hormonal processes.

What’s in a Sunscreen

The Great Reveal

The Great Reveal
You regularly need to exfoliate to boost the natural cell turnover cycle. Without any help, old cells like to linger on the surface, physically blocking young, fresh cells from showing. 

The Great Reveal