{"content_id":"2072130","content_type":"product"}
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by******Da khôDa nhạy cảmDa dị ứngLàm sáng da / Đốm thâmQuầng thâm mắt25/04/2025 (UTC+0)This is a recommendation from a pretty well-known YouTuber. The price point is really reasonable and won't break the bank. This supplement turned my skin into the worst condition I've experienced in the past decade. If you've read reviews about body emulsions, you've probably heard this story before, but during my teens and twenties, I had such severe atopic dermatitis that even water touching my skin caused pain. Since water itself hurt, applying atopic-specific emulsion was torture. But I didn't realize then that pain while applying meant the product was actually attacking my skin, so I shouldn't have used it at all. Without that knowledge, I thought I just had to endure it because it was an atopic lotion. What mattered for clothing wasn't the design but what it was made from. For cleaning, I used baking soda, vinegar, and oxygen-based cleaners. Humidity control was essential. I showered only once every one to three days. After showering, I had to quickly apply emulsion all over my body instead of drying my hair, which took about thirty minutes and meant accepting damaged hair. After carefully managing everything, I finally got relief from severe atopic symptoms in my thirties. Even though it wasn't healthy skin but rather dry skin, the shift from water causing pain to water not hurting was a huge change, so I was grateful for that. After struggling so hard to escape severe atopic dermatitis, after taking this supplement for about a month (42 days), my skin went right back to being painful at the slightest touch of water. At this stage, regular emulsions all cause pain, so I can only apply petroleum jelly (Vaseline-type products) until the redness fades. Do you see the photos? The humidity is 48 percent. Not just my legs in the photo, but my entire body is dry. I've always had sensitive, dry skin, and in winter, if I don't keep the humidifier running above 40 percent humidity, my skin becomes itchy and cracked from dryness. My father has severely dry skin, and it seems to have been inherited. Recently, since humidity has been above 40 percent, I stopped using the humidifier, but while my father is fine, I'm experiencing severe dryness only when it's bad (itching). The ceiling wallpaper is even getting damp from the humidity, so the humidifier isn't malfunctioning. Thinking about what I did differently from my father and what I did differently this winter, the only thing I added was this supplement based on a YouTuber's recommendation. I have many skincare ingredients that don't work for me anyway. I don't have food allergies, and I haven't had problems with medications, but with painkillers, every ingredient except ibuprofen (like Tylenol) makes my hands and feet cold and gives me chills, so I always carry painkillers with me. Painkillers are available everywhere, but there might not be a painkiller with an ingredient I can take without problems. Also, I've given up on many NOW Foods supplements because of their scent, I stopped taking a certain brand's iron supplement because my side hurt, and I stopped taking a certain collagen's hyaluronic acid because my side hurt. Since both hyaluronic acid supplements I've tested caused problems, I shouldn't take hyaluronic acid-type supplements anymore. Now that I think about it, there are people who don't react well to any skincare product, and there are reviews about that, but it seems like there aren't many reviews about supplements that don't work for people. There's a price point involved, symptoms take time to appear, and because of suspicion that it might be due to other lifestyle habits rather than medication, such reviews don't seem to get posted. Topical hyaluronic acid doesn't cause problems, but it seems oral intake doesn't work for me. The photo at 39 percent humidity was taken four days after the photo at 48 percent humidity. Since I was out and turned off the humidifier, the humidity dropped significantly and my skin got worse. The 48 percent humidity point was when I was on day 42 of taking the supplement. About a week before that, my skin started itching from dryness. At first, I thought it was a blanket issue, but it kept getting worse. So after thinking about it, I came to this conclusion and threw everything away. Wasteful? I'm most afraid of medication side effects. There's no medication for drug side effects, so even doctors can't help! It's been four days since I stopped the medication, and it's getting worse. Now, if humidity isn't above 65 percent, my skin feels too tight. I'm waiting for the medication's effects to wear off. The humidity risk has also increased the chance of mold on the wallpaper, but I have to get through this crisis, so I'll have to endure it for a while. Personally, I think hyaluronic acid skincare products work by drawing in surrounding humidity to keep skin hydrated, which is why a humidifier is essential. So I wonder if this supplement is a product that requires increased water intake to be effective. In other words, people who drink less water will inevitably have drier skin, won't they? I've never posted a medication review before, but I'm posting this to warn that these kinds of cases can happen. ______ About one to two weeks after stopping the medication, my skin stopped hurting from water. Four weeks after stopping, my skin isn't itchy anymore but is still dry. It's been raining, so humidity is at 50 percent and I turned off the humidifier, but I'm seeing skin flaking everywhere, so even with sufficient humidity, I think I'll need to turn the humidifier back on. Just don't take hyaluronic acid supplements. Drinking half a cup of water every two hours is a safer way to achieve hydrated skin.
