"About Face" by Peter G. Hanson M.D.
The Effects of Aging, Health and Stress on Your Face

Diet and Your Face: Life is a bowl of Berries!

by Peter G. Hanson M.D. 24. April 2009 16:28

Dermatology may only be skin deep, but it can certainly have some inner health connections.  In particular, our skin can reflect a lot about our diet.  In an earlier blog I reviewed the horrible effects of sugar (http://facemaster.com/Blog/post/Beauty-Skin-Care-Secret-Sugar-turns-up-the-heat!.aspx) .  But while fruit Pop Tarts may be bad for your skin, fruit itself can be very helpful.

Dr. Nicholas Perricone has long advocated "superfoods" such as the acai berry from the Amazon.  These can help prevent inflammation, which is the basis of virtually all diseases.  (However, be careful of Acai Berry scams, and check the review listed on http://www.theacaiberriesreview.com/).  For those of us who can't find acai berries easily, he also hails blueberries and raspberries as being a great source of antioxidants and vitamins, and these are available most of the year. 

On the skin of the face, inflammation shows up in a number of ways, from zits and other blemishes to a generalized "puffiness".  Anything that counters this in the diet is your face's best friend. 

But be wary of the sugar content of many commercial fruit preparations.  Check out http://www.caloriecount.about.com/ to search for hidden dangers.  For example, Jamba juices sound completely healthy, but they start with a sugar solution before berries get added.  So their Berry Fulfilling Original has 45.0 grams of sugar, much more than the raw berries alone would have.  In general, as is the case with most food preparation, it is much better to make your own.  Here are a few secrets to a good smoothie:

1. Start with Very Ripe Berries: Bartenders who make fresh daquiries will all seek out fruit on the last possible date before they are thrown out.  In other words, just at the stale date, the berries are at their most succulent and tender, and will have the most powerful flavor.  By happy circumstance, they are also sold at a discount, often half price, as they will be worth nothing the next day.  While these may look less than perfect when whole, they are unbelievable in the blender.  Add other ingredients like ice, soy milk, yoghurt, or juice for liquid content.  Also add extra ingredients like flax seeds or flax oils, or egg white for protein.  The mixes  are infinite.  Check sites like www.azdrinkrecipes.com/nonalcoholic, and invent your own!

2.  If you can't find Fresh fruit, try Frozen fruit. Thaw in a bowl overnight in the fridge.  Mix in with fresh, like bananas which are usually available year-round.

Here are a couple of tricks for introducing more solid fruit into your diet:

1. For desserts, try fruit without the added sugar, syrup, or cake.   Instead, try having it with lemon juice.  Sure it might make you pucker on first bite, but the juxtaposition of the natural sweetness and the tart lemon juice is quite a treat for the palate.  Another alternative is to serve under melted chocolate or hot fudge, the very dark variety.  When chocolate is over 75% fat, it has much less sugar.  The regular milk chocholate or syrups are usually very high in sugar.  When in doubt, check labels (for example on frozen fruit packages), or check the internet at sites like www.cspinet.org/reports/sugar.com

2. For main courses, try fresh fruit on your cereals, or in organic applesauce, cottage cheese, or plain yogurt.  Garnish with fruit and even an omelette will look better.

3. For snacks, consider fresh fruit instead of junk foods like potato chips.  And remember avoid canned fruit, as it has loads of sugar in the syrup, or has loads of chemicals if labelled "lite" syrup.

 

Every athlete knows that diet is one part of the fitness program, while exercise is another.  In terms of the body, good nutrition plus good exercise will go a long way to preserving a youthful appearance.  In the face, the same applies.  The only problem is the exercise part; the gym holds no machines for any of the 22 muscles on each side of the face.  Scrunching your face into contortions only makes surface wrinkles worse.  So the best option to tone your face into a more youthful appearance is a little help from electricity, namely microcurrent.  This tiny flutter of stimulation tones the facial muscles through the skin, and offers greater circulation benefits as can be seen by the rosy complexion that results in just a few minutes.  Tired pale faces look rejuvenated in just a single treatment.  Although temporary, the treaments improve with consistent useage.  The same could be said for diet: the positive antioxidant effects are only temporary, but the body gets more benefits with regular ingestion.

Visit http://www.perriconemd.com/ for more information about Dr. Perricone's diet for younger looking skin. 

Visit www.facemaster.com for more information about facial toning: Suzanne Somer's best beauty secret. 

Dr. Hanson welcomes your comments.  He can also be reached through http://www.peterhansonmd.com/.   

The Joy of Aging: It's better than you think!

by Peter G. Hanson M.D. 26. March 2009 10:09

Aging is supposed to be a reward, not a punishment.  However, we live in a culture of youth, with media stars and fashion models all being (at least temporarily) young.  So images of health, happiness, sex appeal, charisma and energy are all demonstrated by young people, as if they owned all of these positive qualities.  By default, we think of our elders (if we think of them much at all) as having none of these attributes.  This is the basis of many misconceptions about our aging population, and, even more importantly, about the stereotype that we all carry about our own future.  The reason plastic surgery is so common today is that people are horrified to see themselves getting old.  Yet much of the prejudice about how our own body will age is wrong.  Let's take a look at some of the myths of aging (and take a bit of the pressure off ourselves in the process!):

1.  As we age, we can expect arthritis.  Wrong.  Arthritis is something that can happen at any age, including childhood.  When we see Grampa in shorts in the summer, we notice huge knees in the middle of noodle-thin legs.  Gramps is sure slow to get up from a sitting position.  But this does not mean the problem is arthritis inside the knee joint itself.  When muscles are not exercised, they atrophy.  Thigh muscles that once bulged are now concave.  Even with no change in the joints, the knees will start to look "nobbly" like those of a giraffe.  If Gramps is slow to get up from a sitting position, it is more likely from the lack of muscular strength rather than from arthritis.   






Action item: Exercise, but first consult your doctor and a fitness professional.  Pick activities that suit your interest, or you will quickly lose your enthusiasm.  Also pick something that suits your abilities, and won't cause any harm.  Consider yoga, pilates, aerobics on land or in the pool, or any one of the thousands of sports available from tennis to skiing.  

2.  As we age, our spines will become hunched over, like we are looking for quarters.  Wrong.  Ballerinas and professional models, even in late age, maintain great posture.  This is not by accident, but by discipline; they do daily routines of stetching and toning to keep standing tall. 






Body builder Jack Lalanne, at http://www.jacklalanne.com/jack.html shows amazing posture and energy at age 94 by keeping his muscles toned.  My partner, chiropractor Dr. Brian Stutz, just returned from a convention where he met hundreds of his colleagues, some still working in their 90's.  Even in their tenth decade, all had youthful posture.  Obviously there is something to all the alignment work they do on each other!   






Action items:  Modern work ergonomics are static, drawing our shoulders and necks into forward flexion.  We can see this when we are driving, working in front of our computers, or hunched over a desk reading.  To rebalance the body, start excercising the  muscles that extend in the opposite direction.  For instance, using pulleys or rubber bands to do "rowing" exercises will pull the shoulder blades together, and help oppose the stronger muscles on the front of the chest. Doing daily stretching will lengthen muscles that spend all day contracted: the hamstrings, as well as the pectoral muscles of the front of the ribcage.  Visit a chiropractor for an initial assessment, and consider occasional maintenance visits to treat your alignment.  By doing this you should be able to keep your spine from curving forward, and keep your body fit for vigorous activities for extra years.




3.  Wrinkled skin:  To be sure, none of us will be as smooth-skinned at 80 as we were at 20.  But much of what we assume to be "normal aging" of the face is nothing more than muscle atrophy.  Just like in the legs, this leaves concavities where the muscles once bulged.  Hence the sunken cheeks, drooping eyelids, and downturned mouth.  But your skin does not need to look as wrinkled as this photo: alright, this is an elephant, but you still don't want these wrinkles!








Action item: consider toning your facial muscles the way the professional spas do it.  Use the power of micro-electric current to stimulate your face, and to pump up all 22 muscles on each side.  The skin over top will still age, but muscle toning will take years off your face.  Visit http://www.facemaster.com/ to see Suzanne Somers show how it's done.  In today's economy, it is cheaper to buy your own machine than it is to have even one single treatment at a spa. 



So look aging directly in the face, and don't fear the future.  Not all the answers come from the plastic surgeon's menu.  Take control of your own muscles, and you will have more spring in your step, more height in your spine, and more joy in your face. 

Dr. Hanson welcomes your comments.  Visit Dr. Stutz at his site at http://www.peterhansonmd.com/

      

About the author

Peter G. Hanson, MD co-founder of FaceMaster of Beverly Hills, Inc., and co-developer of the FaceMaster® Facial Toning System, has a very unique background.  Early in his family practice years he delivered over 1,000 babies, worked in the emergency department, and has done over 5,000 house calls.  His book, “The Joy of Stress” has sold over a million copies in 20 languages.  His current practice in Denver specializes in Medical Acupuncture, where he developed techniques in treating, among many other conditions, facial paralysis.  These techniques led to his co-development of a home unit for his patients, which he introduced to Suzanne Somers in 1994.
For more information, contact http://www.peterhansonmd.com/

RecentComments

Comment RSS

Copyright © 2009 FaceMaster of Beverly Hills, Inc. Powered by BlogEngine.NET 1.4.5.0
Theme by R Mohme