Herbal Sun Care
Body Soul
June/July 2002
By ERIKA LENZ
Keeping damage at bay
RELATED ARTICLES
This rich and creamy pudding has a cool, refreshing taste and a chocolaty flavor but no caffeine or...
An herbalists strategies for avoiding (and treating)sun damage....
When my friends and I were in our teens, we
thought that sun care meant smearing on baby oil and baking for
hours with foil reflectors tucked under our chins.
But I was born with pale skin—I burn after only twenty
unprotected minutes in the sun. When I added baby oil, I reduced my
burn time to ten minutes.
Now, hopefully not too late, sun care tops the list of my
health-care concerns. Those of you with more pigment in your skin
might do well to join me: Skin pigment, called melanin, may protect
you from short-term sunburn discomfort, but it won’t protect you
from long-term sun damage.
A lifetime of sun
Although fair-skinned people are more vulnerable to sun damage,
long-term sun exposure will eventually change anyone’s skin for the
worse. Spending hours in the sun, day after day, before age
eighteen probably causes the most damage, according to The Merck
Manual of Medical Information (Merck & Co., 1997).
A tan is a signal that your skin is trying to keep radiation, or
ultraviolet rays, from being absorbed by the rest of the body. The
tan occurs because the skin produces more melanin, which has a
brownish color (freckles are also made of melanin). Although
melanin is the body’s method of protecting itself from the sun,
it’s not fool-proof. Long-term exposure to sunlight thickens the
uppermost layer of the skin (epidermis). Damage to deeper layers of
the skin can cause coarse wrinkles; yellow, rough, thin, or
leather-tough skin; and pre-cancerous growths, called
keratoses.
Ultraviolet rays that cause tanning and sunburn are known as UVB
rays. As exposure to these short wavelength rays accumulates over
the years, it can lead to dry, wrinkled skin, prematurely aged
skin, and skin cancer. Another type of ultraviolet rays is UVA
rays, and they penetrate deeply into the lower levels of the skin,
also causing premature aging, wrinkling, and skin cancer. UVA rays
can penetrate clouds and car and home windows, and excessive
exposure to UVA rays may trigger malignant melanoma, a fatal form
of skin cancer.
How do I avoid it?
You can’t entirely escape the sun. Nor would you want to—some
sun exposure is necessary for good health. Sunlight, specifically
ultraviolet light, prompts the skin to produce vitamin D, a
nutrient that’s essential for calcium balance and, recent research
suggests, cancer prevention.
“Ten to fifteen minutes [of unprotected sun exposure] a day
should be sufficient,”says Esther John, Ph.D., a researcher and
epidemiologist with the Northern California Cancer Center in Union
City. In 1997, John presented a study to the U.S. Department of
Defense showing a statistical association between sun exposure and
a reduced risk of breast cancer.
Page: 1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
Next >>