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Every year at this time severe dry itchy skin! Any real remedies? Login/Join 
Member
Picture of lastmanstanding
posted
Once the weather gets cold and dry my skin starts to crawl. I get severe dry itchy skin to the point where I can't sleep. I rub patches of skin raw because the urge to scratch or rub is simply overwhelming.

I've tried most every lotion or cream that claims to relieve the problem with just a few minutes of temporary relief or no relief at all.

Should I see a dermatologist is there some prescription they can prescribe to relieve the problem?


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Posts: 8757 | Location: Minnesota | Registered: June 17, 2007Reply With QuoteReport This Post
I can't tell if I'm
tired, or just lazy
Picture of ggile
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I have the same problem. I mentioned this to my Dermatologist on one of my visits and he suggested a lotion called CeraVe. It helped some, but like you, nothing seems to work to my satisfaction.


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Posts: 2116 | Location: South Dakota-pheasant country | Registered: June 20, 2005Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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I have the same problem. I have found I must use skin lotion every day if possible. Using it one night doesn't cure it for me. Most mornings I have time to use it right out of the shower.


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Posts: 4046 | Location: New Jersey | Registered: December 06, 2010Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Author,
cowboy,
friend to all
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Found out that I was allergic to just about all soaps! Aveeno is not as bad as the others I tried.
Eucerene is a good moisturizer for me, also Vitamin D3 and E seem to help. It is a real bitch, sometimes just shower with water and little soap or shampoo.
 
Posts: 2410 | Location: Riverton Wyoming | Registered: June 05, 2006Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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My Dad used A&D ointment and felt that it helped. I get good results from Lubriderm lotion.

You might also check the humidity level in your house and adjust if it's too low.
 
Posts: 1383 | Location: WI | Registered: July 07, 2011Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Serenity now!
Picture of 4x5
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Hydrocortisone cream usually works for me, but I only have small patches of itchy skin.



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Posts: 4956 | Location: Highland, UT | Registered: September 14, 2006Reply With QuoteReport This Post
A day late, and
a dollar short
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Thankfully I only have the problem on my elbows, Gold Bond Medicated Cream works well for me, I put a dab on each one every 2-3 days.


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Posts: 13731 | Location: Michigan | Registered: July 10, 2004Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Fire for effect
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Vaseline moisturizes better than the lotions.



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Posts: 7216 | Location: South Georgia | Registered: May 13, 2006Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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O'Keeffe's Skin Repair Body Lotion works for my old skin. I put it on legs and stomach after each shower. I still use O'Keeffe's Working Hands for fingers and hands, nothing else I have ever used came close to O'Keeffe's.
 
Posts: 798 | Location: Katy, TX | Registered: January 02, 2002Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Peripheral Visionary
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CeraVe is top of the heap. Use it throughout the day and use Aquaphor overnight.




 
Posts: 11440 | Location: Texas | Registered: January 29, 2003Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Awaits his CUT
of choice
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I have similar issues but not as severe as your condition sounds. A whole house humidifier will help. The lack of humidity in the air is a major aggravator to my mild excema.
 
Posts: 2742 | Location: York, PA | Registered: May 01, 2001Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Too soon old,
Too late smart
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quote:
Originally posted by tigereye313:
CeraVe is top of the heap. Use it throughout the day and use Aquaphor overnight.



Second the recommendation on Aquaphor. Best of all I've tried including Aveeno

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aquaphor


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Posts: 1519 | Location: NoVa | Registered: March 14, 2009Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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Are you using a humidifier? I have issues with my elbows and hands getting dry and cracked every winter. Keeping a humidifier running in the house at all times seems to help me more than any lotion I've tried.




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Posts: 3626 | Location: Two blocks from the Center of the Universe | Registered: December 30, 2004Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Only the strong survive
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Eliminate Age-Related Skin Dryness with Novel Plant Extract

While Americans rely on topical creams or lotions to combat dry skin, the Japanese have been using a highly effective nutritional intervention that restores the skin’s natural moisturizers internally. These bioactive plant extracts—called ceramides—are absorbed readily into skin cells. In a recent clinical trial, they rehydrated stubbornly dry, itchy, flaky skin in 95% of participants.

By Barbara Wexler

It may surprise you to learn that some of the compounds your skin naturally uses to maintain moisture can also be found in . . . wheat. These biologically active moisturizing oils are known as ceramides, whose name derives from Ceres, the Roman goddess of agriculture.1

In youth, abundant amounts of ceramides are released on the skin’s surface. They’re also found throughout the human body—in the blood, brain, spinal cord, and nerve tissue.

Your body’s ability to synthesize ceramides declines over time, contributing to the degradation and drying of aging skin. The good news is that wheat ceramides are chemically identical to skin ceramides, allowing aging individuals to restore naturally declining levels of this skin protector.

In a major scientific advance, scientists discovered a clinically validated method to deliver these essential nutrients to the skin orally. (Similar oral ceramide skin products have been available in Japan for the past ten years.)

Unlike topical wheat germ oil or ceramide creams that enjoy limited efficacy, this novel oral intervention is absorbed into skin cells from within.

The result? In a recent clinical trial, 95% of participants experienced complete rehydration of stubbornly dry, flaky skin after 90 days, with total elimination of itching, cracking, and other discomforts!

An Anti-Aging Intervention Enjoyed in Japan for Ten Years

Specific purification processes are required to extract and concentrate ceramides to attain therapeutic levels and optimal bioavailability—while keeping their specific molecular structures intact.

A newly developed, ceramide-rich oral formula made from non-GMO wheat has recently shown exceptional promise in rehydrating dry, thin, itchy skin.

In a 4-week, placebo-controlled pilot study, 65% of participants who took an 80 mg capsule daily of the wheat ceramide formula noticed an increase in skin moisture compared with only 45% in the placebo group. Because it takes about 4 weeks—the entire length of the pilot study—for newly formed skin cells to migrate to the outermost layer of skin, improvements observed in this short time period were deemed very promising.3

A 90-day follow-up study tracked subjects who were specifically chosen because of their chronically dry or very dry skin. In addition, some of the subjects suffered from chronic itching. The study considered subjective evaluation by the participants as well as objective dermatological measurements of skin roughness, itching, flaking and hydration, determined by electrical impedance and laboratory tissue analysis. Active treatment consisted of 200 mg per day of the wheat ceramide formula versus placebo.

At the end of the 90-day study, subjects treated with the wheat ceramide formula noticed a significant softening of their skin. Electrical assessment of skin hydration showed improvement in 95% of the actively treated subjects compared with no statistically significant change in the placebo group! All subjects who at the onset of the study experienced chronic itching reported sharply decreased itch or complete elimination of the complaint by the study’s conclusion.3


Dermatological evaluation showed significant reduction of squames (flaking patches of skin) compared with the placebo group. Finally, in a subset of subjects from both the active treatment and placebo groups, leg tissue samples were analyzed for lipid concentration. Levels of protective lipids increased in the group treated with the wheat ceramide formula while no statistically significant change was noted in the placebo group.

In addition to enriching the lipid layer of the stratum corneum, ceramides contribute to skin health and vitality in other ways. The enzyme elastase breaks down elastin, a spring-like protein that imparts suppleness and elasticity to the skin and other flexible parts of the body, including blood vessels and lung tissue. The proprietary wheat lipid formula is a potent inhibitor of elastase, helping to support the natural rebound and springiness of youthful skin, potentially reversing some of the visible signs of aging.4

The wheat formula is an excellent free radical scavenger, reducing oxidative stress and radiation damage of skin tissue. It also possesses anti-inflammatory properties. Research is currently underway that considers the role this formula plays in triggering apoptosis, a natural mechanism the body uses to target and destroy cancer cells.5 In addition to promoting the health and youthful appearance of skin, the wheat lipid formula also may confer a variety of other synergistic health benefits.

Summary

The health and youthful vitality of skin depends on special lipids synthesized by skin cells called ceramides that retain moisture and trigger new cell growth. These bioactive oils, also found throughout the plant kingdom, are present in multiple systems of the body as well (blood, spinal cord, and nerve tissue), indicating their internally functional importance.

Ceramides derived from wheat are chemically identical to those in human skin, enabling aging individuals to restore naturally declining levels of these bioactive compounds through ingestion—a method enjoyed by the Japanese for a decade. Ceramide-rich foods like rice and wheat do not possess these compounds in therapeutically effective concentrations.
The Japanese have enjoyed skin care products for the past ten years that supply the rare ceramides and other specialized lipids nutritionally.

Clinical studies demonstrate that a novel, highly concentrated, ceramide-rich nutritional liquid formula derived from wheat is absorbed into skin cells metabolically, producing dramatic improvements in the hydration, elasticity, and health of dry, flaky, itchy skin (complete elimination of dryness reported by 95% of study subjects). Ceramides are also potent free radical scavengers that significantly reduce inflammation. Research is underway to determine whether they contribute to the body’s system of targeting cancer cells for destruction.

If you have any questions on the scientific content of this article, please call a Life Extension® Health Advisor at
1-866-864-3027.

Food for the Skin

It’s often been remarked that our ancestors never really left the ocean—they just learned to carry it with them. Every cell can be thought of as a drop of mineral-rich seawater wrapped in a protective membrane and ultimately, the entire body is wrapped in the moisture-tight membrane of the skin. Skin can lose its natural moisture and with accelerated drying become ridged and wrinkled, a hallmark sign of aging. The difference is more than cosmetic—dehydrated skin is more brittle, less protective, and slower to heal than vibrant, fully hydrated skin.

Human skin is composed of 3 levels, the outermost of which, the epidermis, is composed of 5 distinct layers, each with its own set of essential functions and cellular structures. Over a period of about 27 days, new cells created at the deepest epidermal layer—the stratum basale—migrate upwards to form the outermost layer of the skin—the stratum corneum.

By the time skin cells reach the surface of the body, most are technically dead. Instead, they become cornified (“horn-like”), transforming into protein-rich “bricks” tightly fused together with a layer of “mortar” composed of a number of different lipids, about 35-40% of which are ceramides.6

The integrity of this “bricks and mortar” arrangement is vital to maintaining your protective outer barrier and keeping moisture locked in the lower layers. Environmental influences can loosen these “bricks,” washing out the oily ceramides and other lipids that make up the mortar—dehydrating and wrinkling the skin.7

https://www.lifeextension.com/...-novel-plant-extract


41
 
Posts: 11974 | Location: Herndon, VA | Registered: June 11, 2009Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Freethinker
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Switching to Dove soap helped me.




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Posts: 48084 | Location: 10,150 Feet Above Sea Level in Colorado | Registered: April 04, 2002Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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Kirks Castille soap works for me


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Posts: 6340 | Location: New Orleans...outside the levees, fishing in the Rigolets | Registered: October 11, 2009Reply With QuoteReport This Post
semi-reformed sailor
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I use doctor bronners soap and it helped with my ecezma . Also take some turmeric daily..it works. I once went to the dermatologist and he said that the best thing was to slather myself in Vaseline and put on a wetsuit and I’d do my skin some help, but he realized that was not an option. He said that the Vaseline only created an impervious layer and kept moisture in my skin and that it was better than any other lotion at it,which is what our skin needs



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Posts: 11628 | Location: Temple, Texas! | Registered: October 07, 2006Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Wait, what?
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Most important is a mild natural soap; Dr Bronners Castile peppermint soap is all I use. As for lotion, Palmer’s cocoa butter has served me well for the last 15 years.




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Posts: 16042 | Location: Martinsburg WV | Registered: April 02, 2011Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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as perception suggested, humidifier would help a bunch
 
Posts: 376 | Registered: September 03, 2000Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Partial dichotomy
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I agree with several posters here.

I only use Dove soap, have a whole house humidifier and a mister humidifier in my bedroom and use Walmart brand lotion after my shower. Keeps my skin for getting too dry and itchy.

I even keep hygrometers in the living room and bedroom to monitor the humidity in my house. I'm pretty anal about it. Plus I have acoustic guitars that need humidity.




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Posts: 39624 | Location: SC Lowcountry/Cape Cod | Registered: November 22, 2002Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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