From Eveningsnews.com

Beauty
Wrinkles – 2 Ounces of Prevention The Newest Science in Anti-Aging Skin Care
By
Feb 20, 2007, 22:21


(ARA) – For centuries people have been searching for the fountain of youth, a legendary spring that reputedly restores the youth of anyone who drinks its waters. Then there are those like Christina Vita, a model and actress from New York, who says the key to looking and feeling young is prevention. She’s now in her 30s, but still looks like a teenager.

So what’s her secret? Vita says she takes very good care of herself. She eats healthy foods, drinks plenty of water and exercises regularly. She also follows a stringent daily skin care regimen. For years, that meant spending at least an hour each day applying expensive day creams, night creams, eye creams and masks to keep her skin looking radiant and young. But one day, she decided to push all the products she had been using so religiously aside.

“Dr. Steven Lamm, the doctor on ABC’s The View asked me to take part in a study of a new skin cream, DermaLastyl. Within weeks my skin became smoother and just the look of it improved,” says Vita. “I loved the cream so much I threw all of the others away. DermaLastyl is my wrinkle insurance.”

DermaLastyl wasn’t originally intended to be a skin cream. Its inventor, Dr. Burt Ensley, a noted Arizona microbiologist, stumbled upon the anti-aging breakthrough while doing research focused on tissue and organ regeneration. He synthesized the cream’s main ingredient, Elastatropin, the precursor to human elastin, to act as a bonding material for tissue regeneration. It is currently being evaluated in a research project at Texas A & M University to be used to grow new human bladders.

In earlier clinical trials, Dr. Ensley tested out the theory that the substance could also be used to reverse the signs of aging, and turns out he was right. Subjects participating in a clinical study done in Manhattan in 2006 stated that use of the cream caused a significant improvement in their skin’s texture and elasticity, a hydrating/moisturizing effect that lasted throughout the day and a glow to the skin upon application. In the majority of participants, daily use reduced wrinkles by 45 percent in two months.

“There are a lot of products out there that come with an anti-wrinkle claim, but this is different,” says Barbara Miglino-Perricone, an early DermaLystyl user. Different because the product replaces the elastin lost by the skin with a bioidentical form. Dermalastyl can actually give your skin the elastin content of a much younger person.

Dr. Ensley explains, “Other anti-aging creams and lotions have used proteins boiled from cows or chickens. My key ingredient is made by replicating the human genetic code in the laboratory.”

In addition to Elastatrophin, DermaLastyl also contains Selenium, which can repair photo damaged skin and prevent the adverse effects of UV exposure, and the highest quality conventional cosmetic ingredients available today. “Our company is bringing real bio-tech to the cosmetic industry for the first time,” says Dr. Ensley.

DermaLastyl has to be specially ordered either by phone or on the Internet. It costs $89 for a two-month supply. For more information, log on to www.dermalastyl.com or call (800) 335-8312.

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