What Tennis Players Need to Know
About Summer Skin Care
By Roy Stevenson

We all love to exercise outdoors when the sun is shining. Exercise enhances oxygen flow to the skin, flushes out impurities from its surface, and promotes production of oil, your skin's natural moisturizer. For good health we need natural sunlight to prevent depression in the winter and to activate vitamin D, which increases bone density. Some research even shows that sunlight has a protective effect against hypertension and some autoimmune diseases.

But there's a downside for outdoor athletes like tennis players. Unless they're very careful they also experience a higher incidence of skin damage and skin cancers because of extra hours spent outdoors in the sun. In addition, over-exercising may suppress your immune system making you more prone to the damaging effects of the sun.

High levels of sweating and lack of protective clothing don't help either. A recent study found that sweat contributes to ultraviolet (UV) damage by increasing the sensitivity of your skin, making you more susceptible to sunburn.

Summer Skin Care - Understanding Skin Damage

Melanin-A Warning of Skin Damage

The sun's ultraviolet rays cause more skin damage than any other factor, in a myriad of ways. A brown pigment named melanin, found in the epidermis is produced when skin is exposed to sunlight-giving us a tan. Melanin protects the skin by absorbing, reflecting and scattering ultraviolet radiation before it penetrates the dermis, or underlying skin. However, melanin can't prevent all the negative effects of the sun, and often indicates damage.

Dry Skin and Photoaging

The sun's heat dries out unprotected skin and depletes the skin's supply of natural lubricating oils, causing dry skin. Dry skin looks flaky and prematurely wrinkled, even in younger people. Photoaging is a term dermatologists use to describe long-term changes in the skin's collagen and elastic proteins located deep in the skin layer called the dermis, that give skin its strength and elasticity.

Other skin cell damage commonly found in tennis players from excess UV rays includes actinic keratosis, a possible warning symptom of cancer, cell membrane damage, reduced immune system reactions, and DNA and RNA disturbances leading to reduced protein synthesis, extreme inflammatory reactions, and basal, squamous, and melanoma cancers-sounds scary doesn't it!

Free Radical Damage to Your Skin

High glucose levels that build up in your bloodstream from poor diet damages skin by reacting with the protein fiber networks (collagen and elastin) that make skin resilient. This reaction creates harmful waste products called known as free radicals, unstable molecules that damage healthy cells through the process of oxidation. Extended periods of time on the court add up to overexposure to the sun- speeding up free radical production that causes the collagen fibers to stiffen, so your skin loses it elasticity and you become more vulnerable to wrinkling, sagging and damage from ultraviolet (UV) light. Luckily, your body also produces antioxidants, molecules whose job it is to sweep up those free radicals before they can do any serious harm. A diet high in antioxidants is recommended for people with constant overexposure to the sun. See the Nutrition for Healthy Skin section to find out what you should be eating for healthy skin.


Signs & Symptoms of Skin Damage:

If you have any of the following symptoms, check with your doctor immediately:
* Any change on the skin, especially in the size or color of a mole or other darkly pigmented growth or spot, or a new growth.
* Scaling, oozing, bleeding, or change in the appearance of a bump or nodule
* Spread of pigmentation beyond its border such as dark coloring that spreads past the edge of a mole
* A change in sensation, itchiness, tenderness, or pain


Summer Skin Care Tip #1: Avoid Sunburn

Clearly, avoiding getting sunburn is a great way to maintain healthy skin. You should avoid playing tennis (and seek shade) between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. when the sun's rays are strongest.

Summer Skin Care Tip #2: Use Clothing to Create a Barrier

When playing on hot, sunny days, lightweight, light-colored clothing combined with plenty of sunscreen on both exposed and unexposed skin is the way to go. However, if overheating isn't a concern, dark-colored, tightly woven clothing is more effective at blocking UV rays than say, a white T-shirt, which allows UV rays to reach the skin. A typical cotton t-shirt only offers sun protection of about SPF 7 - less when it's sweat-saturated. Choose shirts that you cannot see through when held up to a light.

If you are playing in an all-day tournament, get gear that offers built in UV protection. See sidebar listing of UV sun protective clothing brands. You can also add SunGuard to your laundry - this colorless dye gives your clothes an SPF of 30 or more.

A wide-brimmed hat will shade your face, ears and neck while playing. A hat with a visor will not only shield your face, but it will also keep your scalp - where cancers can develop more aggressively - safe from the sun. Lightweight baseball-style caps with mesh panels that will absorb sweat and keep you cool are more comfortable but if you choose one, remember to protect your ears and neck with sunscreen. Follow these practices to protect your skin even on cloudy or overcast days because UV rays travel through clouds.

Summer Skin Care Tip #3: Use Protective Accessories

Protect your eyes from cataracts and the skin around them from developing lines by wearing sunglasses. There are some solid, sporty sunglasses available that block 90 to 100% of the sun's UVA and UVB rays. Polarized sunglasses may be more expensive, but the reduction in glare is worth every cent of the extra cost.


Sun Protective Clothing for Summer Skin Care

Numerous companies sell high sun protection clothing and hats including Sun Soul, Solar Bar, Columbia, Solar Tex, Solumbra, Solar Eclipse, Sun Clothing, Sun-Togs, Coolibar, Patagonia, and others.

The Skin Cancer Foundation sells t-shirts that block 97 percent of the sun’s UV rays.


Summer Skin Care Tip #4: Use Sunscreen

The higher the SPF (sun protection factor) the better. This is because of the increased protection that higher SPF sunscreens provide, and also because most people don't use nearly enough to begin with. The SPF figure only indicates protection provided against UVB rays-not the invisible, ultraviolet-A rays that can also affect skin health and hasten the aging process. That's why you need a broad-spectrum sunscreen that blocks both ultraviolet A (UVA) and ultraviolet B (UVB). While UVA is up to 1,000 times more plentiful than UVB, UVB is about 1,000 times more potent than UVA in producing sunburn and redness.

To find a sunscreen that protects against both UVs, look for Parsol 1789, also called avobenzone or oxybenzone, anthranilates, zinc oxide, or titanium dioxide on the ingredients list. Dermatologists are calling a chemical mexoryl the new superpower of sunscreen protection. With an SPF of 60 it provides much greater protection against UVA rays than anything else on the market. L'Oreal sunscreen is using this ingredient now.

Many people think the higher the SPF rating, the longer they can play in the sun. That's simply not true. While higher numbered products (SPF-85, for example) do provide more protection, using sunscreen doesn't prevent all the possible harmful effects of the sun. Plus, few people use sunscreen the right way-a full ounce every couple of hours, more if you've been swimming or sweating.

The more sunscreen you apply, the better so apply at least a shot glass's worth of sunscreen every couple of hours you're in the sun. That means a six-ounce bottle of sunscreen should last just a few applications-not all summer. And use sunscreen even on hazy or overcast days.

What SPF should you use? Each of us needs a different SPF, depending on whether, and to what degree, our skin burns or tans, but if dermatologists had their way we'd all be wearing sunscreen with an SPF of 85!

Sunscreen should be applied 15 to 30 minutes before going outdoors

Summer Skin Care Tip #5: Eat Foods that are Good for Healthy Skin

Eat a varied and nutritious diet and it's amazing what can happen to your skin. In one study, researchers from Monash University in Australia found people who ate the most fruits, vegetables and fish had the least amount of wrinkles. So, if you want to follow a skin healthy diet, make sure you pack your diet full of these nutrients:

Vitamins E and C. Studies find these vitamins can help protect your skin from the harmful effects of the sun. Vitamin C is a valuable nutrient in collagen synthesis, the protein that helps hold skin together and give it tone. Best food sources: Vegetable oils, margarine, eggs, fish, whole-grain cereals and dried beans for vitamin E; citrus fruits, berries, potatoes, tomatoes, sweet and hot peppers and leafy green vegetables for vitamin C.

Essential fatty acids. Several studies show that the amount of poly- and monounsaturated fats, particularly omega-3 fatty acids, in your diet can minimize sun and aging damage to your skin. Best food sources: Coldwater fish, such as salmon, mackerel and tuna. For healthy mono fats, stick with olive oil and nuts.

Tea, particularly green tea, is an excellent source of antioxidants called polyphenols. That may be why one Arizona study found that the more hot tea people drank (particularly tea with lemon) the less likely they were to develop squamous cell skin cancer.

Vitamin A. One study found a strong connection between antioxidant vitamin A levels in the blood (an indicator of the amount in the diet) and skin dryness; the more vitamin A, the moister the skin. Best food sources: Orange, red and yellow fruits and vegetables such as carrots, sweet potatoes, tomatoes and cantaloupe, and green leafy vegetables such as spinach and broccoli.

Summer Skin Care Tip #6: Drink Plenty of Fluids

Finally, don't forget one last item that's important for good summer skin care and overall health, and that is vital when exercising: fluid intake. Be sure to stay hydrated with water and electrolyte-boosting sports drinks throughout your game as well as after. The amount of liquid you drink directly affects the health of your skin. One sign of dehydration is if you press on your skin with your finger and it doesn't spring back.

And remember, the same information about protecting your skin applies to non-exercisers doing things like gardening, having picnics, and other family activities.

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