Few skin care products will have more of an impact on your appearance than an anti aging eye cream. This is because, when we first look at someone, we usually look first at their eyes. It’s the first thing we notice. The skin around the eyes is also often the first area of the face to show signs of aging.
As we age, changes occur in the skin. There are changes in the production of collagen, a protein found in skin cells, and an increase in elastin, another protein. Melanin, the pigment that controls skin color becomes unevenly distributed and fat is lost from under the top layers of skin. Sweat glands and oil glands start to dry up. Facial skin, constantly exposed to environmental forces such as sunlight, wind, and drying heat, can experience these changes more than other areas of the body, and the skin around the eyes suffers the most. This is what anti wrinkle eye cream is designed to protect against.
Skin beneath the eyes is thin and lacks subcutaneous fat and oil glands to begin with, so it can become drier, thinner, and more wrinkled than the rest of the face. Wear and tear from squinting, blinking, rubbing and other physical insults affect the skin on a daily basis. The blood vessels beneath the skin become more obvious as the skin thins, and the passage of years brings wrinkles, puffiness, and dark circles. Anti aging eye cream can combat some or all of these effects of aging, depending on the formulation.
For obvious reasons, a good anti wrinkle eye cream is not the same as facial moisturizer. Cream for the skin around the eyes is specially designed to support and revive the skin cells there, addressing the particular problems of this area without irritating or damaging the delicate tissues of the eye itself. Many facial products not designed for use around the eye will caution you not to use them in that area: an anti aging eye cream is always the safest choice for treating signs of aging around the eyes.
If there are already noticeable signs of skin damage around the eyes (puffiness, dark shadows, or wrinkles), an anti wrinkle eye cream can be directed against a specific symptom. Otherwise, a program to support the sensitive area around the eyes and slow the development of these symptoms should include a product aimed at all of them.
With aging, skin undergoes changes:
* Collagen (a protein in the skin cells) production reduces.
* Elastin (another protein in the skin cells) production increases.
* Melanin – the color pigment – distribution does not remain uniform.
* Fat below the skin disappears, hence the skin sags.
* Sweat glands start drying up.
* Oil glands start drying up too.
Now, the skin around, and specially below, the eyes is thinner and already lacks subcutaneous fat as well as oil glands.
Hence it is more vulnerable to go dry and wrinkled than the rest of the body and even the rest of the face.
The blood vessels beneath the thin skin go more pronounced.
The skin goes sagging.
Wrinkles, puffs and dark under eye circles start showing.
Eyelids start drooping too, going creased and wrinkled.
The age starts telling its tale!
Now, what are the things apart from an anti aging eye cream or an anti wrinkle eye cream, that can be done to undo the wrong that the age has done to the eyes?
Dermatologists suggest the use of alpha hydroxy acids.
These acids claim to remove the dead cells on the top of the skin and allow the lower layer to surface from beneath.
But that is not a big deal.
The normal natural system of the body cell renewal is anyway going to do it, a little later if not sooner!
Why interfere with the inherently intelligent organic natural renewal system through help from an unintelligent chemical artificial outside help?
Just for a little impatience of hurrying up the matter!
It must and does take its toll by disturbing the biological clock of the system that renews!
Moreover, the effect of these acids is unreliable, affecting some and going waste on others.
Then there is another way of going for cosmetic eye surgery – either blepharoplasty (removes ‘bags’ under the eyes by removing extra fatty tissue from lower eyelids) or ptosis surgery (removing upper eyelid drooping).
One Response
viveca
April 3rd, 2009 at 5:22 pm
1Thanks. Very helpful information. Turning 50 in May and want to keep looking my best!
Cheers,
Viveca