Our skin tissue is constantly regenerating every 28 days and
the skin barrier in the middle of the epidermis protects skin
against our external environment and matter. This skin barrier
is very important in order to protect the skin, however it also
has a negative affect in respect to beauty treatments, because
it interferes with the absorption of nourishment products such
as creams and lotions.
Why Your Skin Interferes with Absorption
To understand why ultrasound wave is so good for your skin, let’s
have a look at human skin. Our skin tissue consist of three layers:
1. Epidermis
2. Dermis
3. Hypodermis
The thinnest skin tissue is on the face and the thickest is on
the sole of the feet. The thickness varies with indifferent people
and fat is the main composition in the hypodermis.
Our skin tissue consists of epidermis located in the outer layer,
dermis composed of fibroid material, and subcutaneous adipose,
containing fat.
Your skin is constantly regenerated every 28 days and the barrier
in the middle of epidermis protects skin against the external
environment and matter. The barrier is very important in order
to protect skin, but has negative affect in respect of beauty
treatments, because it interferes with absorption of nourishment
products such as lotions and creams.
Our portable Fyola Skin Massager, makes your body slimmer and
healthier through ultrasonic waves and galvanic ion. It helps
in the elimination of waste matter in your pores, the buildup
of skin resilience and adipose combustion with multiple functions
using a million times ultrasonic micro-vibration per second and
galvanic ion.
Epidermis
This is the outermost layer of the skin and is especially thick
on the palms of the hands and the soles of the feet. The epidermis
is only a few millimeters thick.
Within the epidermis are various layers of cells, the outermost
of which is called the stratum corneum (or horny layer). This
surface layer is composed of twenty-five to thirty sub-layers
of flattened scale-like cells, which are continually being cast
off by friction and replaced by the cells of the deeper epidermal
layers. This surface layer is the real protective layer of the
skin.
A normal circle of metabolism of the horny cells is 28 days,
but aging causes this metabolic speed to be reduced by up to 40
days.
New skin cells are formed in the deepest layer within the epidermis,
called the stratum germinativum. This layer is very important
as no other layer can form these new cells which gradually move
towards the outer layers of the skin as the stratum corneum is
abraded or shed.
Dermis
The dermis is a tough and elastic layer containing white fibrous
tissue interlaced with yellow elastic fibres. The nutrition of
the epidermis comes from the dermis. If the dermis is not healthy,
the epidermis would not be healthy either.
Many structures are embedded in the dermis including:
- Blood vessels
- Lymphatic capillaries and vessels
- Sensory nerve endings
- Sweat glands and their ducts
- Sebaceous glands
- Hair follicles, hair bulbs and hair roots.
The blood vessels may vasodilate in hot weather and may be more
easily seen beneath the skin. This process enables greater circulation
to the skin and increases heat loss from the body, helping the body
to maintain a constant temperature (part of temperature homeostasis).
This process also increases the absorption rate of some chemicals,
for example, organic solvents.
The sweat glands are tubular glands found in most areas of the
body. They are most numerous in the palms and soles of the feet.
Sweat or perspiration excreted by these glands helps cool the
body in hot weather to assist in temperature regulation (temperature
homeostasis) of the body.
The sebaceous glands are the oil secreting glands that help lubricate
the hair shaft and outermost layer of the skin. A certain amount
of oil on the skin is necessary to keep it soft and pliable. This
natural oil on the skin also helps to give skin its water resistance
Hypodermis
This is the deepest skin layer. It connects or binds the dermis
above it to the underlying organs. The hypodermis is mainly composed
of loose fibrous connective tissue and fat. Females have a hypodermis
that is generally about 8% thicker than in males.
The fatty tissue keeps our body heat not to be over vaporized.
When the body contacts with the outside world, it functions as
a good barrier. Fat is transformed to fatty acid and triglyceride
and stored in the fatty cells. The fatty cells are responsible
for composing, storing and burning fat in order to offer energy
that organs or tissues need.
However, if fat deposits too much, the density of the fatty cells
would become too high to be easily transformed again. The deposit
fat becomes lipid cellulite tissue. Aging reduces our metabolism.
Once the fat stored up, it is not easy to decompose again. Due
to the reduction of metabolic speed, the older person finds it
harder to lose weight than a younger person.
How Ultrasound Waves Help Improve your Skin
The major functions of the skin are
- Provides some protection for the body against many pathogenic
microbes and chemical agents
- Protects underlying tissues from UV light
- Restricts fluid and water loss
- Is the sensory organ for temperature, pressure, touch and
pain
- Important role in metabolism, including vitamin D synthesis
and bio transformation of some chemicals. The skin acts to synthesis
vitamin D by the action of short wave UV light on specific sterol
precursors in the skin, which are then converted to vitamin
D.
This skin formation is very important to protect your from any
harmful ultraviolet rays, bacteria and disease. It also interrupts
the nutrition (Nourishment) supply.
Fortunately, the high frequency ultrasound waves can pass through
skin protection and removes the waste product from pores which
cannot be cleaned by facial washing. It also activates each cellular-tissue
to reverse the effects of muscle's slackness and contraction functions.