Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Poring over your pores


Try these at-home strategies and you might be able to avoid expensive dermatological procedures and spa treatments.

* Use a pore-refining cleanser to help break up excess oil, dirt, dead skin cells, and bacteria that can clog enlarged pores.
* Give yourself a weekly pore-purifying facial treatment.
* Make your own deep-cleansing mask using ingredients such as honey, yogurt, or basic Fuller’s earth clay (find it at a health food store) and adding citrus, strawberries, banana, apple cider vinegar, or rosewater.
* Exfoliate a few times a week with a store-bought or homemade scrub, or go for an exfoliating cleansing cloth. More options to try: products that contain chemical or fruit-enzyme exfoliants such as lipohydroxy acid, salicylic acid, glycolic acid, and alpha and beta hydroxy acids, all of which work to dissolve build-up in your pores.
* Try store-bought microdermabrasion cleansing cloths and/or polishers, which work similarly but more gently than a professional microdermabrasion treatment.
* Put your makeup to work. Products such as primers, concealers, foundation, loose mineral powder, and blotting sheets can help you maintain coverage and make large pores less visible. Just be sure to thoroughly cleanse your face at day’s end to keep pores from getting clogged with makeup residue.

If your issues are more significant, talk to your dermatologist about professional treatments such as:

* Dermatological Facials: Many dermatologists and licensed aestheticians (ME)offer professional facials that include deep cleansing, exfoliation, steaming, extractions, massage, mask, and moisturizing.
* Chemical Peels: A professional peel performed by a dermatologist or licensed aesthetician can remove dead skin cells, clear plugged pores, eliminate white- and blackheads, correct discoloration, and generate new skin growth.
* Microdermabrasion: During this deep-cleansing procedure, your practitioner “sands” your skin with a handheld device that shoots a spray of fine crystals onto your face and simultaneously vacuums them up. This non-invasive procedure produces instant pore-perfecting results. (Microdermabrasion is also effective at reducing the appearance of fine lines, wrinkles, creases, sun damage, and minor scars.)

Even though people with normal and dry skin tend to have smaller pores than those with an oily or combination complexion, they may still be susceptible to certain pore problems. Plus, skin type can change with age, or as a result of environmental factors, genetics, nutrition, or complications related to other health conditions.

2 comments:

  1. Thank you, everyone can buy a ready made face care cosmetic or find some natural remedies like recipes with cucumber or Aloe Vera.
    dermatology laser

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  2. But sadly we see people walking around daily with lovely new shoes, fancy handbags, but HORRIBLE skin. When all it takes is a few minutes and a few inexpensive ingredients. Thanks for the support Laureen, and GOOD SKIN to you.

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