Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Skin Tags, a High-Glycemic Diet and Radiosurgery

Skin tags are annoying but harmless little bits of skin that can affect anyone at anytime. More precisely, skin tags or cutaneous (literally "of the skin") tags are common superficial growths that appear as small, soft, finger-like appendages that protrude from the skin's surface by way of a short, narrow stalk. Skin tags are normally non-cancerous, typically have no symptoms, and are often found on areas of the body such as the eyelids, neck, underarms, chest, breasts, groin and other body fold areas where skin rubs against skin or clothing. Treatment is not always necessary unless the cutaneous tag becomes irritated or is aesthetically displeasing.

Skin labels do not usually grow or change and can appear almost anywhere. The cause of these cancers is uncertain, but new studies have shown a relationship between skin labels and a higher level of blood insulin. Cutaneous labels are most commonly discovered among those who are obese, blood insulin proof, have pre-diabetes or are suffering from diabetes.

By reducing your glucose consumption, studies suggest the repeat of skin labels can considerably decreased or even avoided. A diet of mostly low-glycemic meals such as celery, fruits, brown grain, multigrain cereal products and bread, and vegetables is recommended. As it happens, when we eat meals great in carbs food, such as cooked goods, pastries, white bread and grain, the blood insulin in our system improves in an effort to take away the glucose from the system. The glucose is then placed in fat cells and when it is not digested efficiently, the blood insulin level improves considerably causing reduced carbs metabolic rate, or blood insulin level of resistance. By reducing the consumption of these high-glycemic meals our human body's need for great amounts of blood insulin is decreased.

You may not be able to take care of current skin labels by moderating your glucose consumption, but you can have them effectively and effortlessly eliminated with radiosurgery. Radiosurgery is a medical, non-invasive treatments for simple and dangerous wounds. There is usually no re-growth or scratch development after an epidermis tag is eliminated and within seven to ten days the handled area cures making new skin which progressively combinations into the nearby tissue. Every now and then, a biopsy may be conducted to identify an atypical looking skin tag, but usually the physician's research can be determined completely on the appearance of the development itself.

by Lu H. and Jada Bal
LaserTouch Aesthetics
email: westinerow@gmail.com

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