Skincare is a tricky thing because everyone has different skin. Your skin health is shaped by genetics, age, sun exposure and more. It is also tricky because, no matter how good your skincare routine is, some skin issues are unavoidable, especially as you get older. However, even those unavoidable skin conditions are usually treatable. Here are some methods that can help you achieve ongoing skincare success.
Customizing Your At-Home Skincare Regimen
One way to be successful with your skincare is to start a good at-home skincare regimen early. That means using moisturizing and exfoliating products, as well as sunscreen. The skincare products you use need to contain vitamins and skin-strengthening ingredients for the best results. For example, Retinol (vitamin A) is well-known for its skin-protecting properties.
You must also understand that the skincare routine you establish when you are young may not be the same one you need as you age. The aging process can naturally cause thinning or discoloration. Exposure to various elements during your lifetime can also lead to new skin issues with the passing years, such as the development of sun spots or wrinkles. Therefore, it is important to adapt your at-home skin products based on your age and level of skin health periodically.
Treating Skin Conditions Early with Laser Procedures
Products used at home can help you postpone skin damage, but they cannot stop skin aging completely. Eventually, you may start to notice wrinkles or other skin issues that might seem to pop up practically over night. When you see such problems, it is important to seek clinical help quickly. Clinical procedures come in many forms, including treatment with clinical aesthetic lasers. Those lasers are precise devices specifically designed to treat human skin conditions.
Some types of lasers are designed to alter the surface of your skin, but they can also treat additional skin lasers. One way to use such lasers is to have an ablative laser peel. The peel uses the laser beam to eliminate materials covering healthy skin cells. Those materials can consist of any foreign items to which your skin is exposed. Dead skin cells that do not slough off fast enough can also clog your pores and contribute to skin problems until a procedure such as a laser peel removes them.
Other laser treatments are non-ablative. That means they do not change anything about the outermost layer of your skin. Yet, they can contribute greatly to long-term healing. They do so by instigating processes within your body, especially an increase in the collagen your body makes. Collagen creates a gel-like bonding material that helps your skin stay cohesive. By increasing production of it, lasers reduce sagging or wrinkling skin.
Treatments to Use When Laser Treatment is Not an Option
There may be times when laser treatment is not an option. You may simply not like the idea or not like the cost associated with it. It is also possible your clinician may not think you qualify for it. If your skin is not the right type, you are at higher risks for side effects. Burns and blisters are among the types of side effects you may not want to risk.
If you want to explore other treatments for any reason, you can try microdermabrasion or a chemical peel for surface or near-surface skin treatment. Both procedures perform the same type of function as a laser peel, which is debris removal. However, the chemical peel uses salicylic acid or other skin-safe acids. The microdermabrasion process is more of a tool-based exfoliation process that uses the forces of air and tiny abrasive crystals to remove debris.
Figuring Out Your Best Choice
The best choice in the skincare world is not always clear. You may be dealing with a few skin conditions or other complications. To determine which choice to pick, you need professional input. A clinical skin assessment can easily help you eliminate some potential treatments and give you more information about the options on your short list. Then you can make an informed decision about your clinical skincare choices.
great tips. I have tried lots of skincare routines. I finally have a moisturiser which I absolutely LOVE but there are treatments I would love to have to reduce redness and acne scars
So factual – thanks for the comprehensive review
Lots of ideas, I would like to try lasers though.
My tip is don’t assume all your products need to be from the same brand. Sometimes it’s better to mix and match to find the right combination for you.