Dr Loren Pickart
discusses how several
changes in skin condition
caused by human ageing and photodamage can
be reversed with the
use of copper peptides, and provides some
guidance on their safe
application
Reversing
skin ageing
with copper
peptides
The Ancients wrote that
copper was the metal of healing and of love.
They may have been right on both counts.
Increased nutritional copper may increase the production of estrogens
and testosterone (hence ‘love’), since it raises levels of DHEA: however, it is
the healing aspects that concern us here.
During human ageing, skin
becomes thinner and accumulates lesions and imperfections. The structural proteins are progressively
damaged, causing collagen and elastin to lose resiliency. The skin’s water holding proteins and sugars
diminish; the dermis and epidermis thin: the microcirculation becomes disorganized,
and the subcutaneous fat cells diminish in number. Decades of exposure to ultraviolet rays,
irritants, allergens and various environmental toxins further intensify these
effects. The result is a wrinkled, dry
inelastic skin populated by unsightly lesions.
The good news is that certain
types of copper peptides possess biochemical ageing reversal actions and can,
in a morphological sense, restore skin to a younger state. Such copper peptides are increasingly used in
cosmetic skin and haircare products, and to improve post-treatment skin
recovery after dermatological skin renewal procedures such as chemical peels,
laser resurfacing and dermabrasion.
By ageing reversal, I do
not mean the slowing of ageing, as anti-aging therapies purport to accomplish,
but rather the reversion of skin to a biologically younger stage.
A human copper peptide
complex – GHK-Cu forms the basis for these developments. The tripeptide, GHK, which I discovered while
searching for methods to reverse human ageing, is generated by proteolysis
after tissue injury.
When applied to the skin’s
surface, GHK-Cu activates removal of damaged scar tissue and deposition of new
tissue. GHK-Cu also possesses
anti-inflammatory actions and may function in humans as a circulating non-steroidal
anti-inflammatory.
Copper peptides applied to
the skin, increase the thickness of the epidermis and dermis, increase skin
elasticity, and reduce wrinkles. This
results in a removal of skin imperfections such as blotchiness and sun damage
marks, while producing a significant increase in subcutaneous fat cells. Properly used, copper can reduce visible
signs of photo-damage and increase skin density of facial skin in eight
weeks. To see how it’s done, talk to
your skin care professional NOW!
To read a full copy
of this article by Dr Pickart see the Microbuff System Archives…………………