If you are suffered from eczema then it is best to have an open mind towards different remedies for correcting this problem. Don't underestimate the power of something as simple as home remedies for treating eczema. Some of the home remedies may appear trivial however once you try out a few you will soon realize the power of these remedies.
Many options - Home treatment is not just limited to using items like garlic and onion. There are many other things that fall under the home remedy category. Change of diet, use of proper moisturizing oil after a warm water bath, avoiding foods that trigger skin rashes, using ingredients like oatmeal powder for a bath, wet wrap and many other techniques can be used. The trick is to identify something that works for you and persist with it.
Low Risk - Skin is a sensitive part of the body. You cannot afford to apply any product that has chemicals and steroids. These products can lead to other complications like - thinning, infection, scarring etc. In comparison most of the home remedies for treating eczema may not have any side effects and there is very low risk in experimenting.
Low Cost - Steroids and other antibiotics you may easily end up spending more that $1000 over a one year period and still not get a permanent relief from the problem. On the other hand home cures will be much cheaper and hence can be afforded by most people.
Comfort - Treating eczema with home remedies is you don't have to visit a doctor frequently. You can treat yourself in the comfort of your home without exposing your skin to the harsh ultra violet rays from the sun.
Beauty skin care articles & Products
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Natural beauty products are 100 percent safe to use and work just as well as the store brand. Generation upon generations of women created their own beauty treatments at home before the advertising industry lead us to believe that commercial products are superior to those we make ourselves. This is patently untrue. Often, you can create high quality, natural products for mere pennies what commercial formulas cost, with formulas that you can tweak to satisfy your own specific skin care needs. Want a hand cream scented like oranges, but can't find it anywhere? It's not difficult to make your own custom scented hand cream with a few simple ingredients like almond oil, beeswax and essential oils. You can even customize your hand creams consistency simply by adding more or less distilled water to your blend.
All natural beauty products can be easily made at home. Don't believe the hype from huge multinational companies that their overpriced products are far superior to a home made beauty treatment. By choosing to make your own natural beauty products with ingredients right from your pantry, you can save hundreds of dollars a year over expensive creams, lotions, scrubs and bath products purchased in department stores. The money saving benefits are great, but that is not the sole benefit of creating your own, individualized skin care and bath products.
Ingredients in most pantries that can give women a a collection of homemade beauty products that includes lotions, hand made soaps, luxurious bath products and more -without the harmful chemicals and preservatives. By learning how to make all natural beauty products of your own, you will be helping the environment, along with saving money. When we use commercial beauty products, such as soaps, harmful chemicals are rinsed down the drain with each use. Not only are you rinsing money down the drain, you are multiplying the thousands of toxic chemicals already present in our watersheds.
Homemade natural beauty remedies and recipes will help women achieve the look they want without the extra cost. You can make your own facial and body skin treatments such as temporary wrinkle reducers, sugaring products to remove excess hair and rich and rich, moisturizing creams. After making a few basic beauty recipes, you will see how easy it really is to create natural beauty products. When you get more confident in your techniques, you can begin to expand your repertoire of products by experimenting with different essential oils, and adjusting the amounts of distilled water and the types of oils in your products. You will have so much fun creating your own customized products that you'll wonder why you didn't start sooner!
What type of aging skin treatment do you follow? Do you use natural skin creams and lotions or do you prefer to use synthetic or chemical based products? Which one do you think is better for your skin? Even if you use chemical based products, you are probably aware that the natural products are much better for your skin.
What many consumers do not realize is that many brand name skin creams and lotions may contain ingredients that could be harmful to their skin if used on a regular basis. In addition, keep in mind that what you apply to your skin also gets absorbed into your bloodstream.
Some people even resort to drastic methods of reducing lines and wrinkles such as chemical peels and laser treatments. These methods are quite costly and can even leave permanent scarring. However, people still take the chance.
The safest anti aging skin treatment is one that uses natural based creams and lotions. Many of the store brand products these days contain harmful additives. Some of the worst additives include parabens, mineral oil and fragrances.
Parabens are potential cancer causing agents and are added to skin care products to prolong the shelf life. Parabens have been found in the tissue of women suffering from breast cancer.
Mineral oil is used because it makes the skin feel soft. However, it can clog your pores and cause acne breakouts. Fragrances can cause skin irritations and allergic reactions. Avoid anti aging skin treatment products that contain these ingredients.
One of the most effective natural ingredients used is Cynergy TK. This amazing substance comes from New Zealand and is rich in functional keratin, which helps to stimulate the re-growth of vital skin proteins. It is found in only the best aging skin treatment products on the market.
Phytessence Wakame is another very effective natural substance used in the best skin care products. It is derived from a specific type of Japanese sea kelp. It is rich in antioxidants, which helps to repair damaged skin.
The best anti aging skin treatment products contain these two specific ingredients. If you would like more information on these and other natural ingredients then please take a minute and visit my website today.
Possible side effects include headache, flulike symptoms, and greater-than-intended muscle weakness-causing a droopy eyelid after treatment for a blinking disorder, for example. Because Botox is not permanent, neither is the weakness, but the comeback can take weeks. No one knows what the effect might be of long-term use. And it's been observed that a small percentage of people develop antibodies to the Botox, making it less effective.
Botox offers "an alternative to drugs in difficult patients" when other therapies have failed, says Seymour Diamond, director of the inpatient headache unit at St. Joseph Hospital in Chicago. He's conducting Allergan-funded research on the use of Botox for headache. "But I'd be reluctant about its generalized use until proven useful," he says.
Where the science is sound, some insurance plans will cover Botox treatments even without the blessing of the FDA. Injections for writer's cramp, certain gastrointestinal disorders, and spasticity caused by brain injury, multiple sclerosis, or hereditary paraplegia are sometimes covered, for example. Aetna and Cigna, among other insurers, say that they may cover other uses if a doctor deems Botox medically necessary. "Where there's inconsistent literature, we'd give case-by-case consideration," says Daniel Winn, a medical director at CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield of greater Washington, D.C. So far, wrinkles don't clear the industry's bar.
Not a cure. Even when it works, Botox doesn't address the underlying condition. Kessler is now scheduled to get deep brain stimulation, a surgery that will implant electrodes in his brain to override the problematic signals caused by his condition, generalized dystonia; he hopes it will make the injections unnecessary. But sometimes just managing symptoms improves a patient's prognosis. In people with dystonias or spasticity, for example, Jankovic believes the drug can alter the disease's progression: Early treatments may head off the permanent contortions that can occur when muscles are contracted for a prolonged period and tendons shorten.
"I wanted to function," says Edward Rosa, 70, who started treatments after a stroke six years ago left him with clenched muscles on his left side. The retired Montville, N.J., businessman, who still does some consulting, says the therapy allowed him to exercise other muscles, improving his range of motion. At first, he went in four times a year for injections in his arm and leg. As he's progressed, the interval has lengthened; his last appointment was a year ago.
Because the delivery of the drug is localized and its effect wears off, some doctors like it as a possible alternative to more systemic and permanent treatments. Compared with drugs or surgery, "this is so minimally invasive," says Michael Chancellor, director of neurourology and female urology programs at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center. Chancellor uses Botox off label to relieve muscle spasms in the pelvic floor and to manage enlarged prostate. By relaxing muscle tissue that permeates the gland, he says, the drug seems to reduce pressure on other parts of the urinary tract. Chancellor, who has received research funding from Allergan, is now investigating the treatment for overactive bladder.
The neurological disorder that plagues Art Kessler arches his spine painfully backward and swivels his neck sideways. Every three months for the past four years, the 39-year-old private-equity manager from Chicago has gotten injections in his neck and along his spine that relax his tightened muscles and allow him to work, play with his young son, and "live a normal life. It's been huge for me in terms of keeping me mobile," Kessler says. The shots responsible? Botox.
In the past decade, since its war on wrinkles began, Botox has gained a massive following, from soccer moms to movie stars, who refuse to accept the evidence that they're getting on in years. Sales for cosmetic use of the drug, which causes temporary muscle paralysis and prevents the grimacing that leads to crow's feet and frown lines, were $357 million in 2005, according to Allergan, the drug's manufacturer. Meantime, sales for far-less-publicized therapeutic uses reached $473 million, as doctors have wielded it against everything from cerebral palsy to headache to Parkinson's disease and crossed eyes. "I don't know of a single treatment that has more applications," says Joseph Jankovic, director of the Parkinson's Disease Center and Movement Disorders Clinic at Baylor College of Medicine in Texas and a pioneer in Botox research.
It was Jankovic's work that led the Food and Drug Administration to approve Botox back in 1989 as a treatment for blepharospasm, an eye-muscle disorder that causes abnormal blinking. Injecting the drug-diluted botulinum toxin, a poison-directly into an affected muscle inhibits the neurotransmitter acetylcholine from relaying messages from the brain, which relaxes the clenching and thereby eases pain. It's the overactive signaling from the brain that's common to the conditions the drug treats best. Botox paralyzes only at the site of the injection, but patients must endure needle jabs directly into the problem area-again and again, since the drug's effect wears off in a few months.
Off-label use. Besides brow-wrinkling and blepharospasm, Botox has been approved to treat crossed eyes, cervical dystonia (involuntary muscle contractions in the neck and shoulder), and-most recently-excessive underarm sweating. (Acetylcholine also stimulates sweat glands.) But the list of "off label" targets has been growing fast and now includes lower back pain, constipation, epilepsy, tennis elbow, and fibromyalgia, to name a few. Jankovic considers the injections to be quality-of-life-saving to a number of patients with disorders that cause uncontrollable movements, including Parkinson's disease, tremors, and Tourette's syndrome. (With research support from the drug companies, Jankovic has been studying the effectiveness of two competing drugs as well as Botox, in hopes of ultimately lowering the cost of treatment.)
"Without it, I would not be on the air," says National Public Radio talk show host Diane Rehm, who has spasmodic dysphonia. The condition clenches her vocal cords, causing her voice to quiver and crack. Shots into her vocal cords every four months have saved her career, she says. More than 50 clinical trials of botulinum toxin are currently underway, including Allergan-sponsored efforts to rack up FDA approvals for headache, overactive bladder, and spasticity caused by stroke.
There's a lot of experimentation going on," says Christine Cheng, assistant clinical professor in the School of Pharmacy at the University of California-San Francisco, who has studied the body of research on Botox's off-label uses. While there's mounting excitement about the drug's potential, Cheng thinks patients need to be cautious about off-label use, since its effectiveness and safety are yet to be proved in many cases. "Don't demand a certain treatment just because you saw a headline," she advises.

