Proceed with Caution: Skincare Treatments and Their Risks


Keep Your Skin Peeled
Two other remedies for acne and wrinkles, as well as for other skin imperfections, are chemical peels and microdermabrasion. And these treatments do exactly what they sound like: they strip the skin from your face. 

Now, we do lose billions of skin cells every day from our bodies, so helping the process along isn’t such a bad thing. In fact, it makes sense to remove dead skin cells before they clog pores and become pimples. But Samantha’s beet-red face in season five of Sex and the City taught a generation of women that when you play with chemical peels, you might get burned. 

Dermatologists and cosmetic specialists perform chemical peels to lessen the appearance of fine lines, sun damage, and minor facial scars, according to the Mayo Clinic staff, but the process of applying glycolic or salicylic acid to the skin has achieved more successful results in treating acne. Chemical peels help to exfoliate skin and generate new cell growth, and are often used in combination with acne creams or gels to allow the medication to penetrate further into the skin. Potential risks include redness, blisters, scaling and crusting, scarring, infection, and abnormal skin coloring. 

If you think you really need that deep exfoliation, try a slightly less harmful alternative like microdermabrasion. This treatment involves a hand-held device that blows crystals onto skin, gently sloughing off dead skin and unclogging pores; then a vacuum tube removes the debris. It’s like a sander for your face. Like a chemical peel, microdermabrasion is usually a complement to other skin treatments. But unlike chemical peels, it has almost no scary side effects. 

Bargain for Beauty?
Helen of Troy’s face launched a thousand ships. Is yours worth all the health risks, the money, the time that these skincare procedures entail? Maybe. After all, our faces give the world its first—and sometimes its only—impression of who we are. But if you’re going to put your best face forward by getting one of these treatments, you need to know what you’re up against before you dive in.  

Updated January 27, 2011
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04.01.2010
Iz
I had tried all the above mentioned treatments, except laser (I'm sure I will try it, though), and I love them!! I started with mild treatments in my 20's and now that I'm turning 32 I look younger than my actual age. I think in some aspects face is like a business card, because it's a first glance of your personality, and you are going to show it wherever you go, that's why I take a lot of care of it. BTW: I went to dermatologists only. I've heard too many scary stories about burnings or injuries out there...
04.01.2010
Nikki Deterding
I did a microdermabrasion treatment once ... work mistake ever. I had burns in between my eyebrows and on my forehead for weeks, it was a nightmare trying to cover up the scabs, I am just so glad that it didn't scar. Apparently the woman left the treatment on to long.
Considering that I'm a skincare junkie and am not above trying any of these treatments at some point in my life, I'm glad to be armed with this knowledge.
I think the problem is that so many women start freaking about their skin in middle age, after thirty years of tanning, smoking, and staying up late. At that point, you can't undo the damage. I'm of the belief that good skincare starts early, and if you protect yourself when you're young, you won't feel the need for all sorts of procedures when you're older.
04.01.2010
Harriet M
My friend got a chemical peel at the recommendation of her dermatologist and it cleared up her chronic acne within days.
It feels good to write.

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