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What is aging skin?
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FAQ

What is Aging Skin?

We begin to age the moment we are born, and throughout our lives the effects of aging are evident in our bodies. Up to about age 20 years, the most visually prominent effects of aging are in growth and development. Beginning in our 20s, the effects of aging begin to be visible in the skin.

Genetically programmed chronologic aging causes biochemical changes in collagen and elastin, the connective tissues that give skin its firmness and elasticity. The genetic program for each person is different, so the loss of skin firmness and elasticity occurs at different rates and different times in one individual as compared with another.

As skin becomes less elastic, it also becomes drier. Underlying fat padding begins to disappear. With loss of underlying support by fat padding and connective tissues, the skin begins to sag. It looks less supple, and wrinkles form. The skin may be itchy with increased dryness. A cut may heal more slowly.

Simultaneously with genetically programmed aging, the process of photoaging may be taking place. Photoaging is the effect of chronic and excessive sun exposure on the skin. Cigarette smoking also contributes to aging effects by the biochemical changes it brings about in skin tissues.

Photoaging interacts with chronologic aging and may appear to hasten the process of chronologic aging. In fact, photoaging may be responsible for the majority of age-associated changes in the skin's appearance: mottled pigmentation, surface roughness, fine wrinkles that disappear when stretched, "age" or "liver" spots (lentigines) on the hands, and dilated blood vessels. Chronic sun exposure is a major risk factor for skin cancers—basal cell carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma and melanoma.

The effects of photoaging accumulate over years of chronic sun exposure. At first, the effects may be invisible to the casual glance, even while they are on the increase. Photos taken with ultraviolet light will dramatically reveal the accumulative effects of chronic sun exposure. In the following series of photos the accumulative effects of chronic sun exposure are clearly seen. In each set of photos, the two pictures on the left were taken in ordinary light, the picture on the right in ultraviolet light:


At age 18 months, sun damage is not yet apparent.

 


At age 4 years, early sun damage is evident in freckling across the nose
and cheeks.

 

At age 17 years, a teen-ager has significant sun damage due to deliberate
tanning on the beach or in tanning salons

 

In a woman 37 years old, subsurface sun damage is clearly visible
in ultraviolet light

 

At age 52 years a woman has "old-looking" skin in visible light and significantly
sun-damaged skin in ultraviolet light

 

A 64-year-old beach community resident has skin that chronicles a lifetime of
chronic sun exposure. The skin is dry, inelastic, and heavily mottled with wrinkles

(Photos provided courtesy of David H. McDaniel, M.D.)



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As skin ages and accumulates sun damage, a number of lesions (sores or spots on the skin) become more common. These include:

•  "Age" and "liver" spots (lentigines)—flat, brown areas with rounded edges usually found on the face, hands, back and feet. They are age-related and photoaging-related, and have nothing to do with the liver. While they are unsightly, they are not dangerous. However, a large, flat, dark area with irregular borders should be examined by a dermatologist to make sure it is not melanoma.

•  Actinic keratoses—thick, warty, rough, reddish growths on sun-exposed areas of the skin. They may be a precursor to squamous cell carcinoma.

•  Seborrheic keratoses—brown or black raised spots, or wart-like growths that appear to be stuck to the skin's surface. They are not cancerous or precancerous, and are easily removed.

•  Cherry angiomas—harmless, small, bright red domes created by dilated blood vessels. They occur in more than 85% of middle-aged to elderly people, usually on the body. A dermatologist can remove them.

•  Telangiectasias ("broken capillaries")—dilated facial blood vessels, usually related to sun damage. A dermatologist can treat them.

•  Bruising—often a result of skin having lost its fat padding and becoming more susceptible to injury. Some drugs may cause bleeding under the skin. Bruises that persist should be examined by a dermatologist.

•  Wrinkles—changes in the elastic tissue from exposure to sunlight, effects of gravity, or motion factors in the skin. A dermatologist can treat wrinkles with dermatologic surgery.

•  Skin diseases more common in older people include shingles, leg ulcers, and seborrheic dermatitis.


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Is That Lesion a Symptom of Something Dangerous?

Symptom  

May Indicate

A scaly red spot

Skin cancer

A change in color, shape
or size of a mole

Any new skin growth

Bleeding in a mole or other growth

Excessive dryness and itching that doesn't respond to moisturizers

Dermatitis, psoriasis, other
skin disease

Vague or sharp local pain or headache, followed by formation of blisters on the skin

Shingles

Bulging or tender veins in the legs 

Varicose veins, associated
with spider veins

Any sore on any part of the body that fails to heal

Skin cancer, diabetes, circulatory problems

Prevention of Photoaging

While you can't slow down or stop the effects of chronologic aging, you can do something to inhibit the skin damage caused by excessive and chronic sun exposure. To avoid skin damage from sun exposure, always use a sunscreen with an SPF rating of 15 or higher, a hat with a brim, and protective covering of arms and legs. Don't deliberately sunbathe, and limit sun exposure during the 10 AM to 4 PM hours of greatest sun intensity. Avoid deliberate tanning in tanning salons or under sun lamps. If your skin is already sun damaged you can still benefit from these measures.

The skin damage caused by long-term cigarette smoke is avoided by smoking cessation.

The above educational program is brought to you by the American Academy of Dermatology


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