Treat Eczema with Rose Hip Oil
by BioCutis
Eczema, or atopic dermatitis, is normally a life-time disease that involves a wide range of conditions that include dryness, rashes, irritation, inflammation, flaking and blistering as well as cracked skin and bleeding lesions. Fortunately, scarring is rare, but sometimes the areas affected by eczema will form skin discoloration in the affected areas.
Although eczema is not contagious, it’s usually inherited from either the mother or father and can lead to other allergic problems like asthma and hay fever. Many think the worst symptom that goes with eczema is the uncontrollable itch that leads to uncontrollable scratching, which only makes things worse with swelling, cracking, redness, weeping, scaling and crusting.
Eczema Causes
There is no known cause for eczema, but the disease seems to stem from a combination of environmental and genetic factors and is most often seen on the face and joint areas like the elbows and back of the knees.
Eczema is thought to be an immune system malfunction. Patients suffering from eczema are deficient of a certain cytokine protein that is essential to the function of the body’s immune mechanism and an elevated level of other cytokines that lead to allergic responses. With this imbalance, there is confusion and your body creates dermatitis or a reaction even when there’s no major infection or allergen.
Environmental circumstances can spark a flare-up without notice. In the past, doctors thought that eczema was linked to an emotional disorder, but emotional factors, like stress or anxiety, can make the condition worse but are not the cause.
Standard Eczema Treatments
How can I treat Eczema? The best and simplest treatment is to remove whatever is causing the allergic outburst. It could be as easy as changing your laundry detergent or as complicated as changing jobs or moving to a different climate.
When eczema shows its fury, doctors usually prescribe corticosteroids (both topically or in pill form) because of their effectiveness in controlling most of the eczema symptoms, but extended use is not recommended because of unwanted side effects like thinning of the skin, skin rashes, acne and lowering the body’s resistance to infection. With higher dosages and lengthened treatment periods, the list of side effects grows longer and the risks increase.
Natural Treatments for Eczema
For centuries the Incas and Egyptians have been using rose hips to treat skin dryness, eczema, dermatitis and other skin related ailments. Rose hip oil is well known for its soothing and nurturing qualities and can also help skin repair by reducing and eliminating old scars, acne scars, stretch marks, pigmentation problems, wrinkles and fine lines as well as treating dermatitis caused by radiotherapy.
Rose hips naturally contain a high concentration of Vitamin C and oleic, linoleic, and linolenic acids (essential fatty acids). This is a perfect combination to heal eczema as it keeps the skin moisturized and reduces itchiness, inflammation and surface roughness. It also promotes cell regeneration making skin more elastic, smoother and firmer. Because rose hips oil replaces collagen, skin looks younger and healthier.
Despite the fact that there is no known cure for eczema, it can be successfully managed. Pure rose hip oil and natural skin products are excellent eczema treatments. The best part is that because they’re natural, you don’t need a prescription, and you don’t have to worry about side effects or medication withdrawals. When you take control of eczema, it ceases to control your life.
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