Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Sirtuin Skin – Proven Revitalization Using Resveratrol


Miami – RevGenetics (www.revgenetics.com), at the forefront of developing uncommonly effective products using common herbal ingredients, unveils Sirtuin Skin, a resveratrol powered skin care cream. Sirtuin Skin is a resveratrol cream with proven peptides that revitalizes and moisturizes, making skin look and feel younger, longer. Derived from varying sources, including certain red grape skins, resveratrol is considered most beneficial for a broad range of age related conditions because of its powerful Sirtuin activity.

“Sirtuins have shown efficacy in preclinical models for metabolic, neurodegenerative and inflammatory issues* as well as protecting cells against reactive oxygen species, DNA damage, and premature cell death; we believe that these are just three of the powerful skin care benefits offered by resveratrol in Sirtuin Skin,” said Anthony Loera, president of RevGenetics. Resveratrol is one of four powerful skin rejuvenating ingredients of Sirtuin Skin that make this skin care system unique and effective at protecting skin cells, eliminating lines, moisturizing and maintaining skin looking young.
The best skin creams on the market contain Idebenone, prized for its antioxidant properties. Recent studies show resevratol is 17 times more effective for skin care uses. Even more impressive, the Sirtuin cream is thought to have environmental protection properties Idebenone lacks.
“We know elements in the compound control cell function and therefore, indirectly, genes. That may be the genesis of resveratrol’s unique power,” Loera said. Whatever the precise function, the antioxidant results are beyond question.
Often powder forms of the compound are composed of particles that are simply too large to be useful. That’s why RevGenetics proprietary micronized resveratrol is so important. Through the use of proven skin peptides that improve skin appearance and work at the cellular level, Sirtuin Skin is able to use its small resveratrol particles effectively.
Sirtuin Skin’s special ingredients give it unique properties that put it on the cutting edge of skin care science.
Source : PRWeb, Image Copyright - Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivs 2.5 License.

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Lifestyle was originally coined by Austrian psychologist Alfred Adler in 1929. The current broader sense of the word dates from 1961.

In sociology, a lifestyle is the way a person lives. A lifestyle is a characteristic bundle of behaviors that makes sense to both others and oneself in a given time and place, including social relations, consumption, entertainment, and dress. The behaviors and practices within lifestyles are a mixture of habits, conventional ways of doing things, and reasoned actions. A lifestyle typically also reflects an individual's attitudes, values or worldview. Therefore, a lifestyle is a means of forging a sense of self and to create cultural symbols that resonate with personal identity. Not all aspects of a lifestyle are entirely voluntaristic. Surrounding social and technical systems can constrain the lifestyle choices available to the individual and the symbols she/he is able to project to others and the self.

The lines between personal identity and the everyday doings that signal a particular lifestyle become blurred in modern society. For example, "green lifestyle" means holding beliefs and engaging in activities that consume fewer resources and produce less harmful waste (i.e. a smaller carbon footprint), and deriving a sense of self from holding these beliefs and engaging in these activities. Some commentators argue that, in Modernity, the cornerstone of lifestyle construction is consumption behavior, which offers the possibility to create and further individualize the self with different products or services that signal different ways of life.

The term lifestyle in politics can often be used in conveying the idea that society be accepting of a variety of different ways of life—from the perspective that differences among ways of living are superficial, rather than existential. Lifestyle is also sometimes used pejoratively, to mark out some ways of living as elective or voluntary as opposed to others that are considered mainstream, unremarkable, or normative.

Within anarchism, lifestylism is the view that an anarchist society can be formed by changing one's own personal activities rather than by engaging in class struggle.

In business, "lifestyles" provide a means by which advertisers and marketers endeavor to target and match consumer aspirations with products, or to create aspirations relevant to new products. Therefore marketers take the patterns of belief and action characteristic of lifestyles and direct them toward expenditure and consumption. These patterns reflect the demographic factors (the habits, attitudes, tastes, moral standards, economic levels and so on) that define a group. As a construct that directs people to interact with their worlds as consumers, lifestyles are subject to change by the demands of marketing and technological innovation. From Wiki