Cellulites: Women's Worst Nightmare

RESEARCH studies show that 70% of women population addressed cellulites as women's worst aging nightmare.

Cellulite is the lumpy substance; cottage cheese looking thingy, that is commonly found on thighs, stomach, butt, and under arms. It is the result of collections of fat that push against the connective tissue beneath human skin, which causes surface to dimple and look
 lumpy.

Descriptive names for cellulite are orange peel syndrome, cottage cheese skin, the mattress phenomenon, and hail damage. Synonyms may include: adiposis edematosa, dermopanniculosis deformans, status protrusus cutis, and gynoid lipodystrophy.

Although, some men are not exempted to this skin catastrophe, it is mostly present on women.

Our genes, gender, age, thickness of our skin and the amount of fat in our body has something to do with the amount of cellulite we have and how visible it could be.

Regardless of what cause our cellulite, it's highly important for us to know and accept that no magic products, treatments and medicines that can make it disappear.

Expensive cosmetic surgeries like liposuction and mesotherapy can only give temporal treatment and lessen visibility for quite a while.

In addition, doctors even warn everyone who is contemplating to resort to liposuction that it is not an effective treatment for it, because the process is designed to remove deep, good, friendly fat instead of cellulite, which is close to the epidermis.

It is important for us to know that good fats are needed to carry and store fat-soluble vitamins like, Vitamin A, D, E and K. Moreover, fatty acids benefit the body by elevating mood resulting in less depression, can improve cognitive function in the elderly; can enhance learning and attention span in school-children; improve vision, especially at night; promotes healthy skin, lower the risk of cardiovascular diseases and lower the risk of breast and colon cancer.

Below are some tips on how we women should deal with cellulites:

Related information
  • wikipedia