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Quick Eczema Cure Book Review – Honest And Comprehensive Review

Just as certain elements of nature can set off an eczema outbreak, there are natural ways to cure eczema, too. In fact, the natural path to restore skin plagued by dermatitis is the road that worked for Matt Rose, author of “Quick Eczema Cure.”

After years of battling chronic dermatitis, fate landed Matt in the care of one of the few medical practitioners he’d meet who could guide him through natural treatments for eczema. He achieved a 90% improvement in his dermatitis symptoms, curing eczema from the inside out through dietary changes, homeopathic therapies, herbal remedies, and other non-toxic means.

Combining all that he learned from his nutritionist plus extensive research on the work of several leading dermatologists, Matt’s published the 86-page ebook, “Quick Eczema Cure.” This comprehensive guide details every step involved in pinpointing your eczema triggers, and how various natural remedies for eczema work to heal most sufferers who go this route.

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Can YOUR Skin Be Healed of Eczema Forever?
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If you think your skin condition is too far gone for help anywhere but from a traditional doctor, Matt guarantees that these natural remedies will prove you wrong …

When Matt Rose went away to college six years ago, the eczema skin around his knees and elbows became so bad, it cracked, seeped pus, and at times even bled. He confesses to being so depressed and defeated by how eczema had destroyed his appearance and self-confidence that all but dropped out of college.

Matt resolved his bad case of atopic dermatitis by limiting exposure to various irritants, and by experimenting with his diet and a slew of natural remedies. Almost immediately his itching stopped. It wasn’t long before his new diet and herbal therapies returned his skin to its natural, normal state – with normal being “beautiful” in Matt’s eyes!

Now, in full disclosure, there’s one potential drawback to buying “Quick Eczema Cure”: This ebook is not cheap. There are some people whose eczema may not be that bad, so it’s probably worth their time to keep clicking around online to find a kernel of free advice to improve your skin.

I would say that, based on price, this ebook is more for those whose eczema is moderate to chronic … those who may have gone as far as trying a dermatologist, but just didn’t get the level of results or relief they needed.

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Eczema & the Skin You’re Suffering In
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If you’re sick of hiding your skin or feeling self-conscious inside your own skin, you will benefit from this almost encyclopedic amount of information on natural eczema cures. If you follow the plan in these pages, you’re likely to see marked improvement within weeks. That’s because this guide gives you the skinny on:

– The one detox diet that resets you internally in order to rid your system of the weaknesses that cause dermatitis,
– Which vitamin supplements and health food store herbal therapies work to speed up healing from eczema,
– How to make your own aromatherapy skin creams, using nature’s own plants and oil essences to topically dry out eczema’s oozing or pus matter,
– The secrets to Ayurveda for the most chronic atopic dermatitis and much more.

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Do NOT Buy This Ebook If …
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“Quick Eczema Cure” provides the “missing link” for people who’ve tried everything else. It contains a lot of information – too much information if your eczema really isn’t that bad.

I’ll put it this way: If no one even can even see that you have eczema, or if you’re not itching and scratching right now, this program might be over-kill – like bringing a gun to a fist fight.

That said, if you’re part of the growing population who’s had it – if you need “a big gun” to blast this skin condition out of your life, once and for all – you’ll like this: Matt offers a 60-day money-back guarantee for this program!

So, the only thing you stand to lose is the rough, embarrassing evidence of eczema and how it tends to dampen your spirit.

If you or your child have eczema skin that refuses to heal to a natural appearance, CLICK HERE ==> Quick Eczema Cure Book to Discover the Healing Secrets Inside Matt’s “Quick Eczema Cure” Guide.

Do you want to naturally treat your eczema? Do you want to get that fine tone skin tone? Click on the following link to get a copy of The Quick Eczema Cure Guide.

Related Chronic Eczema Articles

Cure Eczema – Reasons Why You Should Use Herbal Medicines When Trying To Cure Eczema

Eczematous disorders present a wide variety of symptoms. Itchiness starts, followed by redness. Scaly skin happens when there is chronic scratching because when eczema hits, the skin becomes dry. There is also inflammation and blisters will eventually appear. These symptoms can go on for hours and even days. Chronic atopic dermatitis stays in the skin for weeks to months if not treated. Treatment using alternative medicine by herbs is one key to healing. Lets take a look on how to cure eczema using herbal medicines!

Cure eczema, when rashes develop, by applying sandalwood paste and camphor mixture. To reduce inflammation, blueberry extracts turned into lotion and shark cartilage can be used. To wash the affected part, use pine tar soap. Vitamin E extracts in supplements can avoid and diminish itchiness.

For oral medications, foods rich in zinc and tomato juice will help in increasing the immune system to fight allergens, which are causes of Allergic Contact Dermatitis. To target two forms of treatment, you can use a mixture of these herbs to make a kind of lotion: dandelion leaves, spearmint leaves, and few drops of oil. It is a good anti-inflammatory lotion which also helps in moisturizing the skin. Use this instead of cosmetic products available in the market so as to avoid the free radicals that were used in making those beauty products. Herbal lotions can naturally heal the skins outer layer.

If the skin is flaky or scaly, exfoliation is needed and a handful of nuts soaked in water can be a good cleansing scrub. Body scrubs in the market contain chemicals and when used in exfoliating the affected part, they can further aggravate eczema because stripping away the epidermis may affect the dermis. After exfoliation, it is best to keep the skin hydrated and moisturized, especially if you are living in a country that has harsh winters. Commercial lotions and moisturizers have fragrances which may harm the skin and increase symptoms of eczema. Virgin Coconut Oil can be used as an alternative. It contains lauric acid which helps in healing.

If redness occurs, cold compress must be applied. Turmeric powder mixed with bitter neem leaves will make the skin soft and can reduce flakiness. If discoloration occurs after the herbal exfoliation, mashed papaya can be applied to bring back the skins natural color. In fact, papaya can also be used for skin whitening, but sunblock that contains SPF 40 and above should be applied to avoid the harmful effects of the sun.

To cure eczema, topical herbal medications can be used. But to prevent it, you can also prevent taking in foods that cause it. Dairy products, chicken, eggs, citrus fruits can trigger skin asthma or allergic dermatitis. Too much of them will enhance eczematous lesions so it is best to avoid them. Herbal supplements taken along with herbal topical medications applied on the skin will relieve eczema in just a few hours to a few days, if eczema is chronic. Avoid wearing clothes which can induce skin dryness. Wear clothes made of cotton instead.

With all of these suggestions, cheaper healing and prevention can be achieved.

Do you want to discover some outstanding techniques you can use to naturally treat your eczema? If yes, then you really need to get a copy of the Beat Eczema Ebook!

Click here ==> Beat Eczema Guide, to read more about this natural eczema cure system and see how it has assisted thousands of eczema-sufferers round the world, to naturally treat their skin condition.

Similar Articles: how to get rid of eczema, best home remedies for eczema, best eczema treatments

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How to Cure Nummular Eczema Successfully

Nummular eczema is quite a common type of eczema.  It is much more prevalent among the elderly male population segment with statistics indicating that it affects around 2 or 3 people in every 1000 in North America.  It is not contagious and will only affect the skin with no observed cross-over effects to other body […]

The post How to Cure Nummular Eczema Successfully appeared first on Best Eczema Remedies.

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Why there will be no cure for eczema for at least 25 years

In a previous post, I made the Eeyore-like prediction that we are unlikely to see a cure for eczema during my lifetime, which means the next 40 years.

Upon reflection, I have become more optimistic: now I only think we might have 25 years to wait.

Several factors combine to make this so: our incomplete understanding of eczema; the ratchet-like course of the disease; its allergic component; and the expense and inertia of drug development.

As currently understood, eczema is initially a defective skin barrier that lets in allergens. In the first few years of life, children develop antibodies that protect them from disease over their lifetime. The defective barrier overstimulates this part of the immune system, and children build the capacity for allergic reactions to common things in the environment that most people don’t react to—pollen and foods for example.

The allergies get locked in. What may originally have been a leaky skin barrier now gets connected to allergies and inflammation.

In recent years scientists have discovered a number of genetic defects in various components of the skin barrier—the super-protein filaggrin, in particular. I can understand that the average patient must have the impression that with this genetic data is coming in, all that scientists have to do is develop targeted drugs to solve the defects. Or gene therapy to replace the bad genes. Surely these are on the horizon?

Here’s why they aren’t. Let’s start with gene therapy. Only one gene therapeutic has been approved anywhere in the world. The European Commission gave permission for Glybera to be used to treat a rare metabolic disease. Gene therapy is most famous in the US for the 1999 death of a teenager who signed up for a risky clinical trial. It is unlikely that over the next few decades we’ll see gene therapies emerge for anything but rare, fatal, incurable diseases. Eczema doesn’t qualify—and even if you could fix the skin barrier by gene therapy, you’d have to act within the first few months of life. What parent would let doctors give their newborn a potentially lethal treatment based only on the likelihood that the kid might grow up to have eczema?

Another possibility is RNA interference, a technique that blocks the conversion of genetic information into protein. RNAi was discovered sometime in the past two decades and recently the FDA approved the very first RNAi therapeutic, for a rare metabolic disease. To treat eczema, RNAi might be used to cut down on the amount of inflammatory molecules produced in the body or in the skin. A number of academic laboratories–I am aware of a couple in Japan–are looking at RNAi for eczema. However, there are no therapies anywhere near a clinical trial, and new “drugs” in this field would face even steeper regulatory hurdles than conventional drugs. Conversely, the reason to get excited about RNAi is that in theory it could allow us to choose which inflammatory molecules to turn off (rather than shutting down most of the immune system, as steroids do).

Now, let’s consider traditional drug discovery. Research does show that filaggrin defects are found in up to 50% of patients with severe eczema. (Naturally, there are apparently unaffected people who have filaggrin defects, as well as eczema patients who do not.)

So you’re going to develop some drug to target filaggrin? Irwin McLean, the filaggrin expert, says that targeting filaggrin could have a big payoff. But he admits that little is known about how the filaggrin gene is turned on or off. Eventually we will know, and perhaps that knowledge will suggest what drug might work.

The question is how a drug might fix or compensate for the defect. [See the comments for a couple possibilities.] And if we eventually find a drug that can correct for a single or double filaggrin mutation, there is still the question of how much benefit that will provide if a patient has already developed allergies.

Drugs are just not custom-designed—that is currently a pipe dream. Drug discovery is time-consuming and costly. It takes $ 1 billion and 15 years of trials to get a drug approved by the FDA. Scientists start with the protein of interest. Then they screen gigantic libraries of drugs to see if any of them affect the protein in useful ways. They tweak those initial “lead” compounds to make them better.

Then they file an application for a new drug. Then they proceed to animal trials: mice, rats, dogs, pigs, chimps. Then human trials—phase 1, 2, 3, 4. At any stage, and if you’re lucky it’s the early going, it can become apparent that your drug is ineffective or toxic.

And here’s another factor: many proteins are just not “druggable” for various reasons. Because of the shape of the molecule or the way it interacts with something else, tiny drug molecules can’t get to the active site; or they get in but can’t get out. Etc.

It is extremely difficult to develop new drugs.

Also, in the past few years the pharmaceutical industry has been in a slow-motion crash. Big companies are laying off scientists because a lot of the original big moneymaking drugs are coming off-patent and not generating enough income for R&D anymore.

Add to this the fact that there’s hardly anything in the pipeline for atopic dermatitis. I know Anacor has two candidates in Phase II trials—new topical anti-inflammatories. Great,  but hardly revolutionary. Regeneron has something interesting going: dupilumab, a monoclonal anti-IL4 antibody. It’s in Phase I.

Venture capital won’t even invest in startup companies unless their technology has passed Phase II.

You can understand my pessimism.

Next: why I might be wrong
End Eczema

Where to look for a surprise eczema cure to emerge

As I wrote in the previous post, the outlook is bleak for new eczema therapies that might qualify as a “cure.” On the fronts of barrier protection and repair and anti-inflammatories, nothing revolutionary is in the works apart from, perhaps, dupilumab, Regeneron’s antibody to IL-4. I can’t see anything emerging from research and entering and successfully exiting clinical trials for at least 25 years.

What might I have left out of this discussion? Where could a surprise come from?

Itch. Itch was the area that occurred to me. Imagine being able to break the itch-scratch cycle in eczema. You know what it’s like: your skin flares up and the itch becomes unbearable. You scratch to get relief. Sometimes you scratch in your sleep. Then your skin is torn up, which for a start can be embarrassing, but also often leads to infection. If there were no itch to begin with, eczema might never become anything more than a minor rash. Its impact on quality of life would be greatly minimized.

I believe we might see a convergence of two major trends that would result in a new anti-itch drug that patients could take in pill or cream form.

The first trend: In the past few years I have seen a number of papers describing newly identified neurons that transmit the sensation of itch, distinct from pain. The experiments were done on animals such as mice and cats; I don’t think these neurons have been found in people yet. But you can bet there are many scientists beavering away to be the first in the field.

Turning on or blocking neural receptors is what drugs do best. Think anesthetics. These itch neurons, if found in humans, are likely going to have receptors similar to those in other animals, and the search will be on to find drugs that block the receptors.

(You could also imagine a therapy using RNA interference to prevent neurons in the skin from making itch receptors in the first place.)

The second trend: scientists are developing powerful new techniques to speed the drug discovery process. While it does take around 15 years to take a new drug all the way through clinical trials to FDA approval, the path is shorter for “repurposed” drugs (such as Viagra, originally planned as a heart medication). The barrier is lower because the drug has already been proven nontoxic. Repurposed drugs have been approved as treatments for one condition but have side effects that, depending on your perspective, qualify as primary effects. There could well be an FDA-approved anti-itch drug out there already. It’s just being used to treat toenail fungus.

A company I am familiar with (I know the founders), SeaChange Pharmaceuticals, developed a rigorous way to search through databases of drugs and identify potential side effects or secondary uses, based on the chemistry of the protein targets for the drugs. (Wired magazine named SeaChange’s technology one of the top 10 breakthroughs of 2009.)

The idea would be that scientists would identify itch neurons in humans, and pin down the itch receptor; then somebody at Pfizer or Novartis or whatever would use a SeaChange-like technique to find FDA-approved drugs that block the receptor. Presto: no more itch. Conceivably this might happen within a decade.

Now, evidently these new drug discovery techniques could be applied in the areas of anti-inflammatories, or barrier repair. I think, though, that itch is a prime candidate for a surprise eczema “cure” because it’s likely that the itch sensation comes down to a single receptor. Blocking that receptor by a conventional drug will be a relatively simple task, compared to controlling inflammation without leaving the patient vulnerable to infection, or taking on the dubious task of compensating for a defective skin barrier in infants.

That’s my opinion.
End Eczema

A SolveEczema Perspective: “The Cure for Dishpan Hands” – Part 1

Over the years, I have been thanked by many people who used SolveEczema.org just to solve a dry skin problem, even if they did not have eczema. I have been thanked by many parents and more than one doctor who realized they could wash their hands frequently when necessary, without drying their skin out. As I am very clear about on my website, I am not a doctor, this is based on my own personal observation and research. Getting results relies on capitalizing on that new perspective.

I am writing this to share what we — and now many others — have done using the Solveczema.org perspective to get unexpected, out-of-the-box results with ameliorating dry skin, for those who maybe can’t seem to find any moisturizing cream thick enough to prevent painful cracked skin during the winter or on travel, or who struggle with washing the dishes even with gloves.

Obviously, I can’t promise a “cure” without a traditional medical study, the title above is just a restatement of the usual idiom and my opinion about its applicability, although this is a perfect set up for a clinical study. I believe this perspective could not only improve the health of health providers’ skin, but also improve compliance with handwashing, and thus help reduce hospital-borne infection.

If you are ready to try this, first read the SolveEczema site disclaimer, watch the SolveEczema site video linked from the home page (note, I made it for a long-concluded crowdfunding for my book and haven’t been able to update the ending, it’s an amateur effort — sorry, it puts me to sleep, too — but it’s only about 45 minutes and is still a good summary of the site).  Read everything here, use your judgment, talk with your physician as needed for health and safety issues, and don’t make any changes until you understand how different this is. It’s not about individual products, it’s about learning how to have optimal skin health without treatments or moisturizing, by understanding what, in my observation, is really going on.

I need to mention here again an open source paper I posted online about SolveEczema, giving a rough description of how it relates to the eczema and allergy epidemic of recent decades, and summarizing many of the novel observations:  https://thewinnower.com/papers/3412-abnormal-ampli-fication-observations-from-applying-the-engineering-method-to-solving-eczema-and-atopic-disease

It’s only two pages — please refer to the Analysis and Observations section for essential novel observations.

Again, with my apologies for the presumption of giving this a personal, alliterative name like this in hopes of making it more memorable, I also need to restate this very different-from-traditional view of why skin becomes dry after washing, per my own observations, because it’s crucial for getting results:

Lumsdaine’s Law: For most people, under most conditions, eczema and dry skin are more the result of what is left on the skin than what is stripped from the skin by washing.

Water alone on the skin increases the membrane permeability. Membrane permeability is basically just how easily certain substances — like water molecules — can pass through the membrane, from within and without.  If you wash your hands in the winter and don’t dry them well afterwards, your hands chap even if you only washed in water, because the water left on the skin increases the permeability and accelerates water loss.

Under normal conditions, the restoration of water in the skin is quite rapid; if someone washes and it takes days for the skin to rehydrate, my contention is that it’s because of what is on the skin in the meantime, not usually from what was stripped from the skin by normal washing. Detergents on the skin (see the paper) in combination with a small layer of water, including from sweat, dramatically increases permeability and subsequent water loss.

Continued in Part 2…

Solve Eczema’s Blog

Expert Tips To Help Cure Baby Eczema Naturally

Baby eczema or infant eczema is quite common, estimated to affect around 15% of babies.  It presents with similar symptoms in adults, most commonly dry, reddened and inflamed skin (rashes) that is itchy.  It may have a great impact on the lives of families mainly due to the distress it causes on the baby from […]

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Practical Lifestyle Advice For Eczema Cure

Lifestyle habits are the bedrock of eczema cure.  Combined with the other natural eczema remedies we have covered, they ensure that all the gains made can stick and not be reversed.  It is important that at least for the first three months after starting your treatment regimen, you should follow these guidelines.  Once the eczema […]

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Best Eczema Remedies

What Is Eczema Herpeticum And How To Cure It

Eczema herpeticum is a very serious medical condition. It usually occurs as a secondary infection among those people already affected by eczema. It comes about when a person who is already suffering from a chronic skin infection contracts Herpes simplex virus, as a superinfection. For the people who don’t have any recurring skin condition like […]

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Best Eczema Remedies

The Eczema Cure: Heal From The Inside Out With Real Food

You invest in a new treatment, hoping the itch and suffering will go away. The redness and itch disappear for a few days, you finally get your piece of mind, but alas it rears its ugly head once again. Sounds familiar? Well what if we told you the secret to curing eczema isn’t what we put […]
It’s an Itchy Little World