A Natural Microdermabrasion Process
The exfoliation process can be performed in your home and this article will explain the basics. The goal of the microdermabrasion is to eliminate the superficial layer of the skin called the epidermis. In order to understand how microdermabrasion work it's best to start with the skin. The microdermabrasion can be performed until you begin to see your skin reddened or until you feel the first pain of abrasion. When you palpate the surface of the abraded skin, you will feel roughness of the skin, as you are touching keratinocytes, which are better hydrated than the surface corneocytes.
Keratinocytes appear in the basal layer from the division of keratinocyte stem cells. They are moved up through the layers of the epidermis, experiencing gradual specialization until they reach the stratum corneum where they create a layer of devitalized, flattened, strongly keratinized cells named squamous cells. This layer creates an effective barrier to the entry of foreign matter and infectious elements into the body and reduces moisture loss. Keratinocytes are eliminated and restored continuously from the stratum corneum. The time of movement from basal layer to shedding is generally one month.
Corneocytes are cells derived from keratinocytes during the late stages of terminal specialization of squamous epithelia. Corneocyte shedding at the skin surface is a complex biologic event which is usually regulated for providing an inconspicuous shedding of individual corneocytes.
The microdermabrasion is performed to eliminate some of the corneocytes. These cells are responsible for the impermeability of the epidermis. The reduction or elimination of scars, skin lesions, blotchiness and stretch marks from the skin can be an easy process with the use of skin exfoliation. The result depends on how well the procedure known as "skin remodeling" works. The skin is able to heal lesions quickly to avoid blood loss and infection. Scar tissues are made from a quickly formed "collagen glue" that the body gathers in an area for protection and strength when damaged. In perfect skin healing, damaged skin is quickly reconnected or closed, then the healed area is slowly reconstructed to eliminate the residual collagen scar tissue and blend the skin patch into the surrounding skin. Excess collagen is removed and replaced with a mixture of skin cells and imperceptible collagen fibers.
Microdermbrasion Guide To Smoother Skin
Microdermabrasion comes from a technique known as dermabrasion. Dermabrasion has existed for decades and was used to treat severe scarring by scrubbing the external surface of the skin with an abrasive, metallic instrument. This highly effective technique needs recovery time, not to mention anesthesia. Microdermabrasion is a more natural skin care that is a gentler, less invasive technology to use for performing an exfoliation on the skin. And, there is no risk of dyschromia on darkly pigmented patients.
Skin Exfoliation Helps Scar Reduction
Results are optimal and fewer treatments are required with more recent and/or superficial scars or stretch marks. Still, microdermabrasion improves stretch marks that showed up during adolescence or many years after pregnancy. Before initiating the treatment you should know that the final result of the aspect of stretch marks will be a softening but never a full disappearance. So you have to make a final decision when to end the treatment.
A biological microdermabrasion is the latest solution to erase scars, imperfections and skin discolorations. BioSkin Exfol is an effective exfoliation that also soothes your skin.
Published February 27th, 2008
Filed in Beauty