{"id":4666,"date":"2009-09-28T23:41:49","date_gmt":"2009-09-29T03:41:49","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.saratoga.com\/living-well\/2009\/09\/vitamin-c-your-skin.html"},"modified":"2017-11-30T10:23:42","modified_gmt":"2017-11-30T15:23:42","slug":"vitamin-c-your-skin","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.saratoga.com\/living-well\/2009\/09\/vitamin-c-your-skin\/","title":{"rendered":"Vitamin C & Your Skin, A Different Perspective on the Flu Vaccine, A Naturopathic Approach to Preventing Ilness AND bonus follow up on weight loss"},"content":{"rendered":"
Follow up Bonus 1st because I’m very excited about this!: A recent article by Dr. Mercola<\/a> explaining the impact of your habits on genes and how genetic subtypes have predispositions to weight gain. This makes the study of nutrigenomics an exciting study and shows its potential as the future of medicine. This article explains that testing for the FTO gene varient can tell us if you have a predisposition to a slower metabolism. Another example is testing the MTHFR<\/a> gene to see how your methylation potential, which is needed for detoxification and heart health. Furthermore, as a follow up on my health feedback<\/a> from last week, the article discusses “the skinny on fat!” <\/p>\n A recent study in Science Direct tested Vitamin C’s role in skin health. <\/p>\n Excerpt: So, eat your organic oranges! <\/p>\n
We propose that vitamin C may protect the skin by promoting fibroblast proliferation, migration, and replication-associated base excision repair of potentially mutagenic DNA lesions, and we discuss the putative involvement of hypoxia-inducible transcription factor-1 and collagen receptor-related signaling pathways. <\/p>\n