Noredol News No.6, 2006
E-Publication of Cinna Health Products, a divison of Molecular Research Center, Inc.
Skin care news, science news, answers to general questions and tips for your good health, and what people are saying about
Noredol® Skin Care Gel, a new generation of cosmetics.
divider

Noredol® News

    Previous Issue
    Archives

Noredol® Home
    How to Use
    About Noredol
    FAQ
    Testimonials
    About Cinna
    Order Page

Contact Us

 
Another happy Noredol user

NOREDOL NEWS

  • We recently upgraded our website at www.noredol.com with new enhancements that benefit you, our customers, and increase our ability to provide additional services. These enhancements provide important additional security and allow you to make changes more easily during the order process.

One new benefit allows customers to choose whether or not they wish to receive news and information via email by simply checking a designated box. If you received this edition of Noredol News via email, it indicates that you successfully added your name to our email list!

Please remember that Cinna Health Products does not share, sell, or otherwise make available your email address or any other personal information to any outside organization. It is used by our company to send you notices and new product updates. If you wish to remove your name from our email list, please email us at support@noredol.com, using “remove me” in the subject line. Our cus-tomer support staff will see that your email address is removed from our files.



Favorite New Quote:

"Love it. I have had rosacea for 20 years and this is the first product to truly address the redness on regular basis."
                                                                                             Cynthia, Fayetteville, NC



BOOKS

Coping With Blushing. (Overcoming Common Problems).
by Robert Edelmann, 96 pp.
Sheldon Press;
New Edition, 2004
ISBN: 0859699196

Rosacea: Your Self-Help Guide.
by Arlen Brownstein and Donna Shoemaker,
170 pp.
New Harbinger Publications, 2001
ISBN: 1572242248

Understanding Skin Problems: Acne, Eczema, Psoriasis and Related Conditions.
by Linda Papadopoulos and Carl Walker,
150 pp.
John Wiley & Sons, 2003
ISBN: 047084518X


FACE TIME

  • Your Skin has a problem – how it affects you?    We all are extremely conscious of the way we look and how other people see us. Our image of ourselves and our perceived idea of how others may think about us affects a great deal how our social personality develops. Having skin problems, like acne or rosacea, is one of the things that can change person’s whole life. Although the reaction to persistent, especially to the long term skin problems can differ from person to person, there are a couple of common behavioral characteristics that are displayed, such as: less self-confidence; preoccupation with the skin and outward appearance; over-compensation in dress or a total non-care attitude toward appearance; withdrawal from social events and friends; reduction of self-esteem; rebelliousness and suppressed anger; negative self image and poor body posture; passive, low-key attitude toward work.

Acne symptoms appear early in life, and the first reaction to them can be behavioral problems in teenagers and young people with acne and pimples. If the skin condition is not treated early on, that may progress into permanent scars in adult personality, and can in turn affect the whole life happiness: personal contacts and relations as well as professional achievements. Parents sometimes do not remember about that aspect of their children’s skin problems or they marginalize it. However the teaching of the ways of handling the acne-related stress should be important part of the overall care of acne skin.

Rosacea develops most often in the middle life, when people are expected to be stronger and to know better how to handle stress. However, obviously, the rosacea symptoms can be very distractive in personal live, in new relations and in professional performance, regardless of age. As the early symptoms of rosacea are rather mild (mostly persistent redness) and can remiss for quite long periods of time, it is very important to control them from the very early on. Proper recognition of rosacea, and early, everyday application of good, effective skin care product is the best way to return to the before-rosacea life. Noredol® Skin Care Gel offers good, reliable cosmetic control of rosacea and acne skin conditions and can help to keep less stressful, fuller personal and professional life.


A PERSONAL NOTE FROM DR. PIOTR CHOMCZYNSKI

Stress… Who is immune to this destructive feeling? The only stress-free creatures I am aware of are koala bears. Munching on plentiful of eucalyptus tree leaves and fermenting them to alcohol in its stomach, a koala is always happy, though a little dizzy and somehow disconnected from the word. Please, do not try this recipe and later blame me for the side effects. Instead, I can offer a useful advice for our readers with acne and rosacea. Use Noredol! Your stress is just a small problem when you compare it to the stressful environment your facial skin is exposed to. After years of contact with the sun, wind and cold, it is a small wonder that the skin on our face survives in a relatively intact state. On the top of that, many of us occasionally or routinely sprinkle our faces with corrosive skin agents designed to damage the skin, such as peroxides (benzoyl peroxide) or acids (salicylic acid, glycolic acid, etc.). These corrosive agents are used for getting rid of blemishes from the face. They are (more or less) effective and I am not discouraging you to stop these treatments. But give your skin a holiday and for a change treat it with Noredol. We designed Noredol specifically for a sensitive skin that is the case in acne and rosacea. The skin responds to Noredol with soothing feelings and rejuvenation. After Noredol, the skin has capacity to handle stress so you will be rewarded with the improved appearance and reduced redness and blemishes.

Please, remember that Noredol is a cosmetic and does not cure rosacea or acne (there is no known cure); it only improves the affected skin appearance. If you are under medical supervision, ask your doctor if it is OK to use Noredol with a prescribed treatment. Many doctors now recommend Noredol as a follow up cosmetic after laser surgery and other dermatological procedures.


"Red is beautiful but not on your face."


 ROSACEA AND YOU                                                                            

  Sun blockers and sun screens.                                                               More facts, some questions

  • What should a woman know about sun and birth control pills?   It is good to know that being on birth control pills, which are hormonal pills makes skin more sensitive to sun. As result, the chance of developing an extra number of darker, irregular in shape sunspots increases. It happens because pills act at the hormonal level, and as such activate melanogenesis, the process responsible for production of the skin pigment, melanin. The activation may in turn stimulate appearance of the unwanted brownish spots that are then very difficult to remove and may stay with us forever. Of course, it does not mean that women using birth control pills can not sunbath or have to avoid sun all together. Everything is in good protection. Effective sunscreens, with all good components and high SPF factor as well as limiting sun exposure to reasonable level can help a lot (read in our previous issue how to choose a sun protection product). Noredol® Skin Care Gel can do good job of preparing skin for the sun, and helping the skin after. Apply Noredol® Skin Care Gel just before expected long exposure to sun. Next, put sunscreen on, wait about half an hour and go! After sun exposure, wash your face and apply Noredol again. Its gentle, soothing formula provides cooling relief to the sun exposed skin.

  • All those photosensitive cosmetics should be used during summer wisely.   Some cosmetic procedures that use strong acids, like derivatives of retinoic acid or AHA and BHA acids, should be avoided during summertime. After such procedures the skin becomes very delicate and extremely sensitive to the sun. Everyday cosmetics containing those acids at the lower concentrations can be used, however preferably overnight. During daytime, acid-sensitized skin should be very diligently protected with good sunscreens, with sun protection factor, SPF, of 15 or higher.
Dark spots on the skin can also develop in places, where perfumes or cologne are applied. The scent substances belong to the group of photosensitizing compounds and if left on the skin exposed to sun may promote appearance of extra sunspots.

  • Never enough about acne, rosacea and the sun.   As sun sensitized skin becomes even more prone to acne or rosacea, proper sun protection is a must. Choices of sunscreens should depend, as always, on type of the skin and expected sun conditions. For everyday protection, the sun protection factor of 15 (SPF 15) is sufficient, however it is recommended that the anti-UVA filters are also included in the product formulation. For extra sun exposure, when sunbathing or on the trip to the Sun Belt places, the products with SPF in the range 20 – 30 should be used. Noredol® Skin Care Gel, a cosmetic reducing the appearance of redness, blemishes and flare-ups in skin affected by rosacea or acne does not interfere with makeup, and can be used all year round for everyday skin care, before as well as after sun exposure.


 


 JUST THINK ABOUT IT                                                                             

  • Coffee or tea: to have or not to have…    Stress! Stress! Stress! It aggravates everything, and can have an especially negative effect on rosacea. Many people take a break from their stressful day by having a cup of coffee or tea, including many rosacea sufferers. Our customer service representatives often hear people say of course they drink coffee or tea. Almost everyone loves coffee or tea, including rosaceans.
We can’t STRESS enough how much or how often coffee or tea may worsen rosacea! Ending or at least limiting consumption of these stress reducers may prove to be a stress reducer for rosaceans. In addition, for many Noredol customers who continue to drink coffee or tea, Noredol Skin Care Gel may help to reduce the negative effects of this stimulus that aggravates their skin conditions. So if you experience flare-ups, try to avoid coffee or tea and give Noredol® Skin Care Gel an opportunity to sooth and calm your irritated skin.


 YOUR ROSACEA DICTIONARY                                                                             

  • What is couperose?   Presently, the term rosacea is a well-recognized name for a skin condition affecting millions of people all over the world. In the United States alone, almost 14 million of the 300 million population suffer from this condition. This distinctive disease is well studied and described in the pro-fessional medical literature, and its name also has entered everyday vocabulary. A reddish face and enlarged red nose have been associated with rosacea for a long time. Evidence can be found in paintings of the old masters and in Shake-speare’s characters. It is believed that the first medical description of the condition was presented by Guy de Chauliac, a French surgeon in the 14th century. He gave a good description of rosacea and named the condition “couperose”, from the French term for “pink droplet”. This term still is used today in everyday and medical French language. Interestingly, “couperose” is also used in English to describe teleangiactasic erythrosis, a condition of redness resulting from dilated, broken skin capillaries and small blood vessels on the face. It is rather used in esthetics and cosmetology, for example in the term “couperose face”.
For that reason, it is helpful to recognize these terms and their unique meanings.


Topics you would like addressed?
Email: editor@noredol.info

Copyright © 2006
Molecular Research Center, Inc.
Noredol® is a registered trademark
of Molecular Research Center, Inc.

bottom logo