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Wrinkle Removal Isn't All This Skin Cream Can Do
(ARA) - Susan L. of Fountain Hills, Ariz., plans to age gracefully. So when the 47-year-old Fountain Hills, Ariz., resident noticed wrinkles starting to form on her face, she knew it was time to take action.
"I had just read an article in my local newspaper about a new anti-aging skin cream called DermaLastyl and decided to order some to try on my face. It worked great," she says. So great, in fact, that the cream had originally been developed by a company to use as a wound-treatment to help soldiers injured on the battlefield.
She figured if it could help them, it could help her too, at least she was hoping it would. Lentz, who is a diabetic, had an open nine-inch wound on her leg for over a year. None of the doctor prescribed treatments had worked. "But when I added DermaLastyl to the mix, my wound started to heal extremely rapidly. In fact, now it's almost gone and with almost no scarring," says Lentz.
How could a non prescription cream have worked so well in a situation where medications developed specifically for her condition had not? "The key to DermaLastyl's success is its main ingredient, Elastotropin, the precursor to human elastin," says Dr. Burt Ensley, the noted Arizona microbiologist who developed the cream while doing research focused on tissue and organ regeneration.
Elastin is a protein present in the skin that helps it maintain resilience and elasticity. Our bodies lose elastin as we age. DermaLastyl helps return it to the skin.
While not originally intended to be a skin cream, the decision was made to market it as such after analysis of the results of a 2006 Manhattan study showed that use of the cream improved skin texture and elasticity. The participants reported a glow to the skin upon application and a hydrating moisturizing effect that lasted all day.
Now two years after going on the market, the company has received just as many testimonials from people happy about its wrinkle removing properties, as for its ability to assist with wound treatment.
One of them came from LeeAnn V. of College Station, Texas, who is a long term sufferer of Dermatitis Herpetiformis, a rare, chronic, skin disorder characterized by the presence of groups of severely itchy blisters and raised skin lesions. "I am married to a physician, so I have access to all the traditional care you could ask for, but this product is the first to truly help," she says. "Although I have only been using Dermalastyl for three days, I have no hint of impending irritation -- and I can actually touch my face without setting off insane burning and itching. The tears and holes in my skin appear to be healing, something that generally takes weeks to months following an outbreak. I can only hope it is not too good to be true."
The company says the products are formulated only as skin creams for lines and wrinkles and recommends that users consult with their doctors about treatments for wounds. DermaLastyl has to be specially ordered either by phone or on the Internet. For a free sample, or more information, call (800) 335-8312 or log on to www.dermalastyl.com.
Courtesy of ARAcontent
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