Annoying News About Antioxidants
Filed under: Beauty

It just goes to show, no good deed goes unpunished.
If you've been diligently applying all of your antioxidant-infused products every a.m., there's a chance that they can turn on you once they're exposed to UV rays, and -- brace yourself -- become pro-oxidants, actually generating free radicals, according to Thomas Meyer, PhD of the Coppertone Solar Research Center.
This is a big deal, since it's free-radicals that break down our cell structure and - in short - make us look old. Antioxidants were the chemicals that were supposed to protect us.
Yikes. So does that mean all of our fancy antioxidant-rich products should be saved for nighttime? Not necessarily.
Meyer just developed a new sunscreen range for Coppertone, NutraShield With Dual Defense, which has been rigorously tested to offer protection from free radical damage both in the lab and when exposed to UV rays.
That's all well and good, but what about every other product under the sun?
"There is ongoing scientific research to find out which antioxidants have an adverse reaction when exposed to the sun," says Ava Shamban, a dermatologist who works out of sunny Beverly Hills.
Without a clear list of "good" and "bad" antioxidants, there's no way you or I are able to tell what's oxidizing on our skin until more research is done. (Skincare manufacturers, are you listening?!)
In the meantime, here are a few derm-approved sunscreens that are also superior free radical fighters:
SkinMedica Environmental Defense Sunscreen SPF 30+. Shamban loves the vitamin E and hyaluronic acid-rich formula. $40
Topix Replenix CF Anti-Photoaging Complex SPF 45. It's enriched with green tea and coffeeberry, two ingredients derms are always yammering on about. $35
Revaléskin Day Cream with SPF 15 Sunscreen. When this stuff came out, even the most stone-faced derms were gushing about it. $82.50
And of course, keep the faith in antioxidants -- derms do -- and stay out of the sun as much as you can stand it.












Plush Junkie 4-10-2009 @ 3:39PM
What about VItamin C and Idebenone????
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Jessica Matlin 4-10-2009 @ 1:27PM
Plush Junkie, I wish there were a hard, fast list of which antioxidants stand up in the sun and which don't.
Unfortunately, both Meyer and Shamban told me that because this research is so new, it's not so easy to identify sun-friendly antioxidants just yet.
Also, Meyer told me that the formulation is a factor, not just the type of antioxidant.
And Shamban told me that putting on an abundance of antioxidants has also shown to be counterproductive in the sun.
Looks like we'll have to stay tuned for more research. Until then, I would just be mindful of the sun. And I also wouldn't give up on antioxidants—every derm I talk to stresses their importance. That's just me.
Erika Valente 4-10-2009 @ 1:18PM
Jessica! How are you? Great to see you blogging here at StyleList :)
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