Sun time can equal skin problems
If the recent KFC free grilled chicken meal coupon giveaway has taught us anything, it’s that if Oprah talks, people listen. Not only that, but they go out and buy, or at the very least Google the topic like crazy. Not long ago, an appearance on the show by Dr. Mehmet Oz regarding the benefits of Niacin for sun-damaged skin brought some attention to a product called NIA 24 that could be useful to those among us who don’t want to have to take out instant payday loans or use credit cards to pay for doctor visits related to excessive sun exposure.
This doesn’t mean that it’s OK to bake in the sun or a tanning booth without sunblock. Far from it. It simply means that there could be something that can help repair the damage summer does to sun worshipers.
Promotes healing
NIA 24 is marketed as “Niacin-powered skin therapy.” In a nutshell, UVA and UVB rays from the sun can be very damaging to the skin. They can create problems like hyperpigmentation, wrinkles, small fine lines and a general decrease in the firmness of skin. With extended exposure, a breakdown in the skin via damaged DNA can lead to a host of very serious problems. An affected person would appear to be much older than they actually are.
A new patented Niacin molecule called Pro-Niacin is the primary ingredient in NIA 24 skin products. The Pro-Niacin penetrates down to the lower layers of skin and stimulates it to begin repair and fix damage. Think of it as an instant payday loan that helps your skin in a bind. However, you can’t depend upon it at the expense of not taking precautions when you’re working or playing in the sun. You still must take responsibility for the care of your skin.
Helps skin retain moisture
Pro-Niacin works with Vitamin B3 (Niacin) to recondition skin from the inside out. The molecule is fat soluble, which means that it penetrates the skin, and on the way, enzymes convert it to an active form of Niacin, which:
- Stimulates DNA repair by encouraging skin’s natural repair
- Promotes healthy function within the skin
- Stimulates Leptin release. This hormone is known to activate wound-healing in the skin, so the result is a stronger epidermal layer
- Helps rebuild the skin’s defense layer against environmental irritants like excessive sunlight. Time and exposure tend to break down the natural barriers, making skin more prone to drying out, since they begin to retain less moisture
Clinical Studies of Pro-Niacin
Click the above link to see some of the clinical studies that have been performed.
When Niacin content is increased in the skin, its defense barrier improves, there is greater moisture retention, cell turnover goes up and photoprotection is enhanced. Based upon current research, Pro-Niacin has been named by the National Cancer Institute as a potential skin cancer prevention agent.
Here are just of few of the measured results from NIA 24 clinical trials:
- 90 percent reduction in hyperpigmentation
- 82 percent improvement in texture
- 81 percent improvement in tone
- 80 percent increase in skin smoothness
- 68 percent reduction in the appearance of fine lines and wrinkles
- 53 percent improvement in skin firmness
According to the manufacturer’s Web site, NIA 24 skin products are especially useful for adults who are undergoing “chemical peels, laser treatments, microdermabrasion, cryo therapy or the use of tretinoins.”
The variety of products the company makes available is wide and vary in price. “Gentle Cleansing Cream, Physical Cleansing Scrub, Skin Strengthening Complex, Intensive Recovery Complex, Mineral Sunscreen and Sun Damage Repair for Décolletage and Hands” are some of the variations. Visit the NIA 24 Web site for more information or to find a distributor near you. While products of this nature aren’t cheap, the amount of money you can save in medical treatments covered by instant payday loans and credit cards could be tremendous.
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Excessive sun exposure is bad for you? This doesn’t sound like anything the medical community has been saying for decades. It certainly wouldn’t have anything to do with a higher incidence of skin cancer in people that live in high exposure areas like California and Arizona, or anything like that. Why, if that kind of information got out, people might stop tanning, or worse yet, they might stop believing advertising that tells us what’s good or not anymore based on arbitrary, unempirical ideas designed to make us buy stuff for no good reason at all, and look to information backed by science and rationality. It would be a pandemic of reason, and that is unacceptable – at least by most standards of government, business, and other large institutions.