Healthy Magazine Healthy SoFlo Issue 58 | Page 18

COVER HEALTHY STORY KIDS · OCTOBER · MARCH 2018 2017 E USING NATURAL HERBS FOR SKIN HEALTH veryone is familiar with the proverb that “beauty is only skin deep,” but unfortunately when it comes to skin health, the path to beauty actually runs much deeper. There are many different factors which influence the luster of our largest organ, including not just what we put on it, but what we eat, how much rest we get at night, our stress levels, hormones, acute or chronic illnesses… and so much more! The skin is so responsive that in the time before lab testing, traditional cultures would use changes in the color, tone, and temperature of different areas of the skin as a diagnostic method to make educated guesses at what might be going on inside the body. Knowing that there are so many factors which can influence skin health often leaves people wondering where to begin. Others try to make as many positive changes as possible but feel defeated when they are unable to find “the answer.” Oftentimes, a great way to build upon other positive lifestyle changes is dietary supplementation using traditional herbal medicine. But why herbs? Besides the typical nutrients like vitamins and minerals, plants produce a spectacular array of chemical compounds. Plants “have it hard”, being rooted in one spot with only four organs (roots, stem, leaves, and flowers/ fruit) and still having to do all the same things we do to live. To survive in their environment, plants have to make different chemicals to compensate for their lack of bones, muscles, nerves, blood, brains, and so on. Take the aloe plant for example, which thrives in full sun and dry soil. In order to do so, our prickly friend produces a number of different compounds with water-retaining and anti-inflammatory properties; compounds which we can use to soothe our own sun-damaged skin or inflamed bowels. Many of our pharmaceutical medications originally came from herbs; the benefit of going straight to the original source is you get the natural mix of different complementary compounds rather than one ingredient. Here are a few well-researched herbs that are commonly used in clinical practice to treat different skin conditions: JOB’S TEARS (Coix lacryma-jobi) This plant produces a grain that is often mistaken for barley, giving it the common name of Chinese Pearl Barley in the supermarket. As an herb, it is not considered to have a very strong action, meaning that it is usually taken over longer periods of time, or in large doses. Two compounds in the oil fraction of the herb, coixol and coixenolide, have been found to have moderate anti-inflammatory properties, and are used clinically to help with cystic ac