JRA
Nutridermaceuticals began as a question. Not a conventional
question but one completely out of the box. It did
not build on existing data to improve on the wheel,
but asked, “What if the wheel was in fact
the wrong way to go?”
Dr. Jan Adams, a Harvard-educated plastic surgeon
in Beverly Hills, California, asked, “In
a perfect world, what would the ideal skin care
formula consist of and, better yet, how could
you make it so that even the busiest individuals
would have the time to use it?” Certainly
the research on skin care in the world today had
produced a plethora of products. One need but
walk into any pharmacy or department store to
witness that.
But then one day a light
went on. Skin ultimately comes from the insight
out. The epidermis (the outer layer of skin) consists
of two principal layers: an outermost, laminated
sheet of dry anucleate cornified cells and a living
inner cell layer from which the surface cells
arise by differentiation. In other words, the
epidermis consists of a basal cell layer of keratinocytes
which function as the germinative layer. Human
epidermis is in a constant state of turnover or
self-replacement. As the basal keratinocytes divide,
some of the daughter cells are displaced outward
and then differentiate through successive overlying
layers to enter the stratum corneum. The process
takes about 30 to 40 days. The outermost cornified
cells desquamate into the environment as they
are continually replaced from below. Over most
of the body surface, the stratum corneum varies
within a range of 15 to 20 cell layers. It is
these two facts which serve as the basis for resurfacing
techniques used in facial skin rejuvenation. By
using dermabrasion, skill peels, or laser therapy,
that is either sanding, a chemical reaction, or
heat to remove a few cell layers one can expose
younger, healthier cells. There are,however. drawbacks
and complications associated with these procedures.
For Dr. Jan, there was
one more interesting part to this puzzle. The
time of transit for a cell from the lowermost
part of the stratum corneum to the surface was
more than two weeks. Considering the time required
for replacement of germinative cells, the normal
human epidermis takes from two to three months
to completely renew itself. With advancing age,
the replacement rate decreases, requiring the
corneocytes to reside at the skin surface for
longer periods of time. The cells thus become
more weathered, resulting in greater than normal
water loss, decreased wound repair, decreased
perception of pain, and impaired barrier properties.
But what if, Dr. Jan reasoned,
you could increase epidermal cell renewal through
cosmetics and nutritional intervention? Science
tells us we can increase the cross-linking of
collagen fibers by increasing the intake of vitamin
C. Could one also increase the production of epithelial
cells and cell turnover by giving the body the
substrates it needs to make cells? Can you not
drive reactions in that direction by supplying
the precursors used by the body to make skin?
Cannot old, weather-beaten cells be replaced more
rapidly by fresh, healthy, supple, new cells?
That hypothesis led to
the formation of JRA Nutridermaceuticals, and
it is precisely that observation that led to the
creation of Rudalgo, an aesthetic endo-nutridermaceutical.
Rudalgo is the future of skin care, today!
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