Help With Seborrheic Dermatitis On My Face

by Mr. Clark

Currently I'm seeing some SD (Seborrheic Dermatitis) on my face, around my nose area, between my eye brows, and sometimes on my chin.

Is there anything I should avoid putting on my face, or something you would highly recommend? I have also noticed that when my skin is tanned the dermatitis goes away. Is there any correlation between tanning and dermatitis?


Thank you for your help, God bless.

Mr. Clark

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Help With Seborrheic Dermatitis On My Face

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Response To: Help With Seborrheic Dermatitis On My Face
by: Nanette From Skin-Remedies.com

Hello Mr. Clark,

Any products that contain mineral oil or other petroleum based ingredients should be greatly avoided as they can actually increase the skin's dryness levels. These ingredients have NO usefulness to the skin nutritionally and in fact, the molecules are too large to even pass the pores of the skin so the cream just sits on top and literally suffocates these pores thereby causing further dryness and damage.

I have two very natural and deep penetrating products that I highly recommend to you. Use them daily. First, what you wash with is so very important and I can't emphasize this enough. Many products on the market today are loaded with harsh, drying ingredients that strip the natural PH of your skin leaving it further vulnerable to the effects of sun, wind and environmental air. Use our gentle and pure FACE & BODY WASH that will deeply cleanse and moisturize your skin even before you apply cream. This is an important feature since your cleanser should leave you with a plus moisture level and not a minus moisture level!

Next you will want to apply our FACE & NECK THERACREAM twice daily. This hypo-allergenic cream penetrates all 7 layers of skin to unpack dry, damaged cells and restore much needed moisture from the bottom up to the very skin surface. The dry, flaky, rash like symptoms will dissipate as balance begins to be restored. Both of these products are formulated with skin nurturing ingredients that repair, restore and replenish natural moisture levels in the skin.

And lastly, keep "sunning" time to a minimum! Although UV rays from sunlight trigger vitamin D synthesis in the skin and can be helpful with a variety of skin conditions, moderation is important as "tanning" is actually the skin's response to damage caused by too much exposure to the sun.

Please keep me posted on your progress Mr. Clark as you begin your new regimen.

Warm Regards,
Nanette

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