The Hemp Connection [Search results for cosmetics

  • Pump Up Your Progesterone, Part 1 Watch Out for Environmental Estrogens!

    Pump Up Your Progesterone, Part 1 Watch Out for Environmental Estrogens!

    I had the most wonderful Sunday afternoon with a newly pregnant client and her husband. She's been told that her progesterone is low, and she was interested in knowing if there is anything she can do, naturally, to help improve the outcome of her pregnancy. We discussed five different categories of actions. Since this is an issue many women face, I'm adding them to the lineup of planned posts, today being the first of five installments.

    Progesterone can be low if estrogen is high. In many cases, it's not the natural estrogen your own body is making, but environmental chemicals resembling estrogen that confuse the body.

    To reduce your exposure to unnecessary estrogen…

    1. Stay away from plastic. Store your leftovers in glass containers. Be absolutely sure your food does not come in contact with plastic or Saran during heating. Avoid plastic water bottles; metal varieties are pretty easy to find in your Whole Foods or REI store.

    2. Use natural cosmetics and hair dyes. inCYST Provider Carmina McGee, who is a licensed aesthetician as well as a registered dietitian, has shared that the primary offending chemical, phthalate, is gradually disappearing out of cosmetics. But just to be sure, read your cosmetic and nail polish labels. Make your cosmetic shopping easy by using an all-natural brand such as Body Shop or Arbonne.

    3. Get to know your local eco-friendly decorating and remodeling stores. I recently painted my condo with paint that was free of volatile organic compounds (also known as non-VOC). I used the Benjamin Moore brand which was available at a local Ace Hardware, because I liked the color selection…but there were several eco-friendly brands, and remodeling stores I found while shopping around. One store also had quite a few"green" cleaning supplies as well as carpet glue.

    4. If you are not sure of the contents of inks, glues, cleaning solvents, fertilizers, pesticides, fire retardant fabrics, etc., minimize your contact with it. Here's a great list from the National Institutes of Health for your reference.

    5. Minimize your intake of dietary estrogens. This one can be a little tricky, since one of the tricks we've been recommending for getting pregnant has been supplementing with flaxseed oil, a natural source of estrogen. Once you know you're pregnant, best to back off on the flaxseed. (Special note: This release I'm linking is so new the actual study is not yet listed in the National Library of Medicine database. As soon as it is, I'll be sure to evaluate and report in more detail here.)

    The other food to be aware of is soy--whole soy foods such as edamame and tofu are ok, but stay away from isolates that are often used as fillers.

    6. Keep your sleeping environment as dark as possible at night. Close the drapes. Use eye shades. Eliminate televisions and computers from the bedroom.

    What I really like about this first list is that it is, really, about living cleaner and greener. So choices you make for your pregnancy are doing double duty and helping out the planet!

    Next time I'll take a look at insulin resistance.

  • Sea buckthorn…or…why it is important to read cosmetic labels too!

    Sea buckthorn…or…why it is important to read cosmetic labels too!

    At Expo West, I am always as interested in the beauty care section as I am foods. I have come home with lots of great information that I've shared with all of you about how to have the healthiest skin you can. However, Expo West has also taught me that the hype in the beauty industry is as bad, if not worse than, what I work with daily in the food industry.

    We are an appearance-based culture, and as a culture we fear aging. That gives the beauty industry a lot of ammunition to work with. A simple promise of younger skin, a suggestion, and magical thinking takes over.

    The booths for these products are all beautiful, and the claims sound reasonable. It is only when you get home, away from the lights and the pictures of someone else's flawless skin, that logical questions start to have a chance.

    For example, I was very taken by the beautiful orange and white booth of a company called Sibu Beauty. They were selling a product line based on the ingredient"sea buckthorn". This is a berry native to Tibet, with a high anti-oxidant content that helps it to survive the harsh mountain climate.

    The big claim of this product line, though, is its high contents of all of the omegas — 3, 6, 9, and 7. Not real fond of omega-6…as you know, it's pro-inflammatory.

    Omega-7? Yes, 7. Never heard of it, so I took as much information as I could so I could come home and research more.

    Went to the company's website, clicked on the"science" link, found no links to studies specifically supporting their claims, no clinical studies, no before-after pictures.

    I did see a photo of a beautiful young woman who likely had yet to see a mark of aging hit her flawless skin and who very likely couldn't point out Tibet on a map if you asked her to.

    Here's what bothers me about these companies selling anti-aging programs using ingredients from exotic places like Tibet and the Amazon. If you Google Image pictures of women from these countries, you see beautiful faces like the one to the left, with the history of the elements carved into their expressions. Why do these companies who sell these supplements from these exotic places like Tibet and the Amazon, never show the faces of real people who live there. Shouldn't they be the real testimonials for how these products work?

    The site proudly shared that it had been promoted on Dr. Oz. Do you know what it takes to get your product on Dr. Oz? A good PR agent, mostly.

    Out of fairness to the man, however, I did watch one of the videos from his sea buckthorn segment. He didn't really talk much about skin, but rather focused on two rats, both who had eaten a high fat diet, one of which managed to stay thin because it had also been given sea buckthorn. So my takeaway here was that Dr. Oz was promoting the concept that you can eat crap as long as you can get your hands on some exotic foreign berry extract. (C'mon, Mehmet, really? I could give you a laundry list of exciting nutritional angles for your show…teaching people who to eat junk and stay thin is not one of them.) I digress. The truth is, Dr. Oz spoke about sea buckthorn in general, not the brand promoting the fact that Dr. Oz promoted the product.

    Went to my favorite resource, PubMed, and looked up sea buckthorn. I did see some studies with regard to wound healing, a lot about anti-inflammatory action, and even more about it being therapeutic for ulcers. But no rave reviews for the product as an anti-aging agent. And I even found one study suggesting that skin fatty acid content did NOT respond to sea buckthorn supplementation.

    Finally, contacted a good friend in the beauty industry, who has a background in library science and who deconstructs cosmetics labels like I deconstruct food labels. She'd heard of the product, even tried it herself, wasn't impressed.
    So here we have a product with proven therapeutic benefit that is not being promoted, being promoted for something completely wacky by a celebrity who knows when he talks miracle weight loss his ratings stay where the advertisers want them, being sold to do something completely unrelated to either by its manufacturer and unproven in clinical studies.
    If your head is spinning, it should be. This is an awful lot of smoke and mirrors. If it gets to be this confusing, your hype and fraud radars should be going crazy.

    Save your money.

    Yang B, Kalimo KO, Tahvonen RL, Mattila LM, Katajisto JK, Kallio HP. Effect of dietary supplementation with sea buckthorn (Hippophaë rhamnoides) seed and pulp oils on the fatty acid composition of skin glycerophospholipids of patients with atopic dermatitis. J Nutr Biochem. 2000 Jun;11(6):338-40.

  • Some of Christine Cassano's resources for hormone-friendly art supplies, cleaning supplies, and cosmetics

    Some of Christine Cassano's resources for hormone-friendly art supplies, cleaning supplies, and cosmetics

    Christine Cassano's interview was jam-packed with information about how to clean up your work, home, and beauty environment.

    Here are some of her recommendations for products and companies who can help you do the same.

    Art Supplies
    American Clay Plaster: http://www.americanclay.com/

    Clay Paints etc
    http://www.bioshieldpaint.com/index.php?main_page=products&cPath=93
    Environmentally safe paints, sealers, etc
    http://www.afmsafecoat.com/

    Soy Based Sealers & Stains http://www.ecoprocote.com/

    Local (Phoenix) Vegan [and super-awesome!] Soaps & Lotions
    Strawberry Hedgehog — http://strawberryhedgehog.com/

    Hair Dye: Hennas
    http://www.light-mountain-hair-color.com/#Story

    Soaps & Lotions
    http://www.drbronner.com/

    Shampoos & Makeup
    http://www.aubrey-organics.com/default.aspx
    Cleaning Products
    DIY: http://www.thedailygreen.com/green-homes/latest/green-cleaning-spring-cleaning-460303
    Shaklee: http://www.shaklee.com/products_home.shtml
    Seventh Generation: http://www.seventhgeneration.com/

    General Resource Links
    EWG: the most comprehensive environmental consumer advocacy group: http://www.ewg.org/
    Understanding the risk of everyday beauty products 101: http://www.safecosmetics.org/
    Beauty Products Chemical Database [by EWG]: http://www.cosmeticsdatabase.com/

    Christine also mentioned a company called AKA Green. While they no longer have a store front, they do have a blog.

    And our own co-host, designer Michael Keele, is devoted to finding and selling similar products. Check him out at http://www.centralslope.com/.

    If you'd like to see Christine's art, here are three opportunities:
    http://www.christinecassano.com/
    http://www.monorchid.com/
    http://www.practicalart.com/

    If you missed the interview, you can find it in our archives at http://www.blogtalkradio.com/incystforhormones/2010/11/03/how-pcos-influenced-my-life-and-my-passion-artist-christine-cassano