Get anti-aging skin care tips for younger-looking hands and nails.
By
Colette Bouchez WebMD the Magazine - Feature
Reviewed by
Michael W. Smith, MD
You know all those hours you log in at the gym and the small fortune you're
dropping on skin cream? If you're not taking
care of your hands, you're still spilling the beans on just how many candles
will be burning on your next birthday cake.
"Hands not only are susceptible to the first signs of aging, but very
often age even faster than the face," says Ellen Marmur, MD, chief of
dermatological and cosmetic
surgery at Mount Sinai Medical Center in New York City. That's because the
skin on the back of the hand is much thinner than that on your face.
"There is very little fat on the backs of the hands, so when even a
small amount of collagen or elastin fibers begins to break down -- which is
part of the normal aging process and partly from sun exposure -- it's going to
have a noticeable impact on your hands," says Gregory Buford, MD, a Denver
plastic surgeon.
The end result, say experts, is wrinkly, crinkly crepe-like skin texture and
the noticeable appearance of bulging veins, which also grow larger over
time.
"Depending on how much sun exposure you had as a child and young adult,
aging also brings out brown spots, known as liver spots -- pigmentation
problems that give away your age," says dermatologist David Goldberg, MD,
director of Skin Laser & Surgery Specialists of New York and New
Jersey.
But you don't have to throw up your hands and give in without a fight. WebMD
asked medical experts for top strategies to turn back the clock on your mitts,
from pumped-up pampering at home to the latest developments in professional
treatments.
Home Skin Care for Your Hands
If you're like many women, your at-home hand care is limited to using
dishwashing detergent with moisturizer and maybe a drugstore hand cream now and
then. But experts say with just a bit more effort, you can improve the
appearance of your hands right now -- and 20 years from now. "There are
certainly products and key ingredients that can make a temporary difference in
how your hands look, and there are some exciting advances that could help make
a real difference in your skin," says Goldberg.
Cream of the Crop
Among the newest advances are creams containing growth factors, mostly
derived from plants. "These are creams that appear to promote new collagen
formation -- you're not going to get what you would with a [medical treatment],
but it's not a bad idea to begin using these creams every night starting at
around age 40," says Goldberg.
Science backs this up. One recent study, published in Journal of Drugs in
Dermatology in 2007, reported 83% of women between ages 35 and 65 who tried
creams containing growth factors found improvement in their hand wrinkles after just 60 days.
Creams containing growth factors include:
- Regeniskin (50 mL/$29.95)
- SyCream by Syprex (2 oz/$39.50)
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