Good Nutrition and Your Complexion
As the old cliché goes, "Health is Wealth." Hence, it is always
important to uphold the value of proper eating and living a healthy
lifestyle in order to stay in shape and to be perfectly well.
However, being healthy is not only constrained on having a
perfect body. In fact, aside from having a perfect body, being
healthy could also mean having a healthy skin as shown in the skin's
complexion.
That is why, most people who are known to be health buffs are
also known to be good-looking people. This is because the inner
beauty radiates and exudes deep from within, even without the traces
of make up.
Nowadays, looking good is not anymore a factor of being vain but
is already considered one way of staying healthy. This is because
many medical experts are now insisting on the fact that good
nutrition is, indeed, an important factor in having a good
complexion and image.
In reality, many people are not aware that good nutrition is a
great factor in generating a healthy good-looking skin. They only
thought that eating the right kind of food would make people
healthier and live life longer. What they do not know is that good
nutrition is also a big factor in having a good complexion and
healthy skin.
Therefore, for people who are not aware why good nutrition is
important in maintaining a healthy skin complexion, here are some
reasons that they should be aware of.
1. Eating foods that are rich in vitamin A is important in
maintaining a healthy skin.
A daily dose of vitamin A is proven to be an effective way of
reducing the appearance of acne, wrinkles, and other skin
problems.
However, care must be properly observed when taking foods rich in
vitamin A. Too much intake of this vitamin may result to serious
problems like liver diseases.
2. Good nutrition replenishes the lost vitamins and minerals that
the human body is not capable of producing.
When people are exposed to the sun the skin's reservoir of
vitamin C goes down, and unlike most animals, humans cannot make
vitamin C.
Therefore, it is important to reproduce vitamin C by eating foods
that re rich in vitamin C. In this way, the skin will be able to
combat the harmful effects of the damages caused by the sun's
ultraviolet rays.
3. Eating foods rich in antioxidants is definitely good for the
skin.
In order for the skin to work against the upshots of oxidants or
the free radicals that are manufactured when the body cells burn
oxygen in order to generate energy, it is important for the people
to eat foods that are rich in antioxidants. These foods are the
"green, leafy vegetables" like the spinach.
Antioxidants are also present in foods that are rich in
carotenoids like beta-carotene. A good example of this is
carrots.
It can also be present in food supplements such as vitamins E and
C.
4. Eating foods rich in fibre can also contribute to good skin
complexion.
Fibre, or roughage, is composed from the plant's cell wall
material. Whole grains, legumes, citrus fruits, nuts, and vegetables
are all good sources of dietary fiber.
On its basic sense, fibre is an example of complex carbohydrate
that is relatively essential in the absorption of the other
nutrients into the body. Without fiber, some of the nutrients will
only be put to waste and will not be consumed by the body.
Hence, with fibre, the skin's complexion will be healthier
looking and will even produce healthy glow.
5. For proper growth and production of new skin cells, proteins
are the best sources in order to help in this process.
Proteins are chains of amino acids responsible for the skin's
cell growth and maintenance. Protein in foods from meat, eggs,
poultry, fish, and dairy is called complete protein because it
contains essential amino acids necessary for building and
maintaining skin cells.
Thus, a properly maintained skin cell will result to a good skin
complexion.
Indeed, eating right does not merely produce a healthy body but a
healthy skin as well. Hence, people should be more aware of what
they are eating because it will surely reflect on their skin's
appearance.
As most people say, "You are what you
eat."
|