week 3 and week 4
We all worry about the effect an extra glass
of wine has on our waistline — but what about on our skin?
To find out if ditching alcohol can improve
your complexion, we challenged Laura Hogarth, a 40-year-old mother-of-two from Falkirk,
to spend a month without consuming a drop of booze.
Before this, Laura drank about 15 units of
alcohol a week — which equates to around five large glasses of wine and is
just one unit a week above the recommended national guidelines for women.
Week
One
Laura says: ‘Urgh, this picture looks
horrific. I look awful. My skin is red and flushed, all the way down my
decolletage. My forehead and nose are shiny and there are rough, dry patches
across my cheeks.
‘More worryingly, I don’t remember thinking
my skin actually looked this bad.
It can take weeks of no drinking for the
blood vessels to constrict fully and redness to disappear altogether.
‘If you drink regularly over a number of
years — and especially in larger quantities — small peripheral veins can become
permanently enlarged after being repetitively expanded, causing thread veins
and permanent skin damage.’
Week two
Laura says: ‘What a miracle! I’m sleeping for
longer in the mornings and getting up less frequently during the night.
‘Before, I might have woken up once or twice
— whether I’d had a drink or not — but now I am sleeping like a baby. It might
have helped that it was also the school holidays, so the children were sleeping
in as well, but I am definitely waking up feeling brighter and more alert.
‘I’ve also noticed that in the evenings I’m
not snacking as much. Normally I’d crave crisps with my usual glass of wine,
but sipping a glass of lime and soda means I don’t feel like junk food. The
urge just isn’t there
'The spider veins remain on her lips and
nose, but these might take longer to go, if at all. Facial puffiness is caused
by the gentle leakage of fluid from enlarged blood vessels.
‘During the night, when we lie flat for a
number of hours, this fluid tends to accumulate around our eye-lids and
cheeks.
'This is because lying down helps gravity
push it in that direction, but also because this is where the skin is loosest
and therefore has the most room to accommodate excess fluid.
‘During the day, as we stand up and move
about, the trapped fluids are released back into circulation, so the facial
swelling reduces.
'After a period of time without alcohol, our
blood vessels constrict, so less fluid will accumulate in the first place and
skin will look less swollen after a night’s rest.’
Week three
Laura says: ‘By now I’m noticing a difference
in my skin’s dryness, and not just on my face.
'It sounds unpleasant, but when I used to
take off leggings or trousers I often noticed dry flakes of skin left behind.
Now there’s hardly anything.
‘Equally the backs of my hands are looking
less dry and — unless I’m imagining it — marginally less wrinkly.
‘When my mother visited this week, she said
how less blotchy I was looking — success! A friend also said my skin tone
looked more even.
‘Euan and I have noticed less of a difference
day-by-day. That’s probably because it’s such a gradual change, but friends and
family are noticing the improvement in my appearance which has given me a real
thrill.
‘This has made me feel braver and more
confident.
Dr Lowe says: ‘There’s a significant reduction in facial
redness, even around Laura’s nose and lips. She looks healthier, less puffy and
slimmer, especially around her cheeks and jowls.
‘Stopping drinking alcohol means you reduce
your calorie intake. There are up to 185 calories in a large glass of
wine.
'Not only that, alcohol has the secondary
effect of stimulating appetite, so I’m not surprised Laura isn’t snacking as
much.
‘Drinking alcohol also makes the skin dry
because increased blood flow though the skin speeds everything up and
stimulates skin cells to renew and shed quicker.
‘Studies have shown high levels of alcohol
consumption can also exacerbate dry skin conditions such as psoriasis and
facial eczema.’
Week four
Laura says: ‘While Euan hasn’t noticed my
mood changing, by week four I’m feeling invigorated and so much better in
myself.
‘I’m getting fewer headaches and have much
more energy. My lips are less dry, too — I usually get a cold sore almost every
week — but since ditching the booze not a single one has appeared.
‘Better still, I’ve lost 3lb and my face
definitely looks slimmer. I have to admit, it’s been far easier to abstain from
alcohol than I’d feared. I said no to a few barbecues, just in case I was
tempted, but I’ve enjoyed feeling healthier and brighter, especially in the
mornings.
‘On the whole, the month has sailed by. I’m
going to try and stick to the no drinking rule — or at least cut out alcohol
during the week.
'I’ve only had one major lapse since the end
of my booze-free month. It was the very first night after the experiment and I
went out with a group of friends to celebrate.
‘We drank far too much, and guess what? When
I woke in the morning I looked red as anything and noticed a small dry patch of
skin had re-emerged. It just goes to show alcohol does a lot worse than just
give you a hangover!’
Dr Lowe says: ‘Although the changes between the final two
weeks are subtler, this last photo shows a much improved Laura.
'Her eyes are more open and brighter. This,
again, is because of the increased blood flow caused by alcohol. If more blood
passes through the eye’s surface, it looks duller and more bloodshot.
‘After four weeks without alcohol, the blood
vessels have constricted and her eyes are bright white once more.
'By now the redness across her cheeks and
neck has vastly diminished and the thread veins around her nose have largely
disappeared.
‘This is a classic example of what I’d hope
to see for someone who has given up alcohol — and if she sticks to it, she’ll
only feel and look even better.’
Alcohol does do more harm to the skin than just a hang over.
No comments:
Post a Comment