How does our skin age?

Chronic skin ageing is a natural process leading to a loss of firmness and elasticity, intensified by various endo- and exogenous factors such as weight loss, sun damage, environmental stress, body condition and lifestyle. With the passage of time, the production of collagen and elastin as well as hyaluronic acid in the skin cells becomes slower and slower and, as a result, the skin loses its youthful appearance.

 

Fat tissue and its impact on ageing

As we age, the amount of subcutaneous facial fat tissue, or adipocyte fat cells, also decreases. This process deepens wrinkles, furrows and deforms the facial oval. The oval of the face changes from a V-shape. The tissue ‘moves’ downwards yielding to the force of gravity, causing the skin to sag and the facial features to sharpen. The proportions change, the volume decreases and the oval of the face widens downwards. As a consequence, the adverse effect is a deterioration of the skin’s biomechanical properties: loss of firmness, distorted facial oval, particularly visible in the jaw line of the face, deepening of wrinkles, lack of skin firmness. A decrease in collagen and elastin production simultaneously leads to atrophy, i.e. tissue atrophy. Atrophic skin is characterised by a loss of volume and elasticity, while wrinkles and furrows are much more visible on it. It also becomes more susceptible to mechanical damage and UV radiation.

Changes in the skin that progress with ageing

Cause

Effects

NASK

    • decrease in total epidermal thickness by 10-50%
    • increased “skin sensitivity” and susceptibility to damage
  • slower lipid renewal processes
    • deterioration of barrier function, dryness
  • extension of the cell cycle duration of keratinocytes
  • reduced exfoliation
  • slower wound healing
  • reduced number of Langerhans cells
  • decreased skin resistance

INSIDE LEATHER

  • decrease in the thickness of the dermis
  • decrease in the number of fibroblasts
  • decrease in the intercellular matrix
  • decreased skin strength, firmness, elasticity
  • weakening of collagen and elastin fibres
  • activation of deformation processes
  • wrinkle formation
  • decrease in the number and size of blood vessels
  • protective trophic disorder on the background of vascular disorders
  • susceptibility to oedema and inflammation
  • reduction in the size of skin appendages
  • reduced sebum and sweat production
  • dry skin
  • impaired injury regeneration
  • hydration of the skin
  • diminished turgor
  • disruption of the skin’s water balance

SUBCELLULAR TISSUE

  • reduction of body fat
  • gravitational displacement of subcutaneous fat
  • loss of facial volume
  • gravitational collapse of soft tissues

muscle tissue

    • changes in facial muscle tone are not the same: some muscles are in a hypertonic state (upper and lower one-third of the face), while others are in an atonic state (middle one-third of the face)
    • wrinkle formation

CASE

    • bone resorption – involving the very slow absorption of minerals found in bones, leading to bone cell replacement or atrophy
  • gravitational displacement of skin and subcutaneous tissue

 

dr Khrystyna Shekhovtsova

Chantarelle expert, dermatologist and aesthetic physician

 

Chantarelle rejuvenating cosmetics

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