The Proof
Now, you may be saying you've heard that one before, but before dismissing that as a cosmetic industry come-on, listen to these facts:
- 32% decrease in fine lines, wrinkles and crow's feet after just one month, decreasing 57% after three months.
- 34% improvement in the overall appearances of the skin after just one month, increasing 45% after three months.
- 33% decrease in wrinkle depth after one month, decreasing 55% after three months.
In a clinical trial conducted on women with an average age of 67, these "mature" women increased their Skin Renewal Rate, or "SR2," so dramatically that it matched the skin renewal rate of women in their late 20s. That's right. 67-year-old skin with a renewal rate of a 29-year-old!
Your skin renewal rate reflects the speed at which your new skin cells replace your old skin cells—in other words, it's a standardized measure scientists use to determine your skin's "aging" parameters.
It's also one reason a 29-year-old always looks younger than a 67-year-old.
Idebenol facial anti-oxidant doesn't only make you look younger, though. Idebenol is a highly selective "free radical killer."
The Reason
"Free radicals are highly reactive molecules that can severely damage skin cells," explains Dr. B. Grant Bishop, M.D., noted dermatologist and Clinical Professor of Dermatology at the University of Utah.
"Free radicals ultimately weaken the skin's immune protective system, damage DNA and result in 'mutational events' like thinning skin, loss of elasticity, age spots and, of course, wrinkles and the classic signs of premature aging."
So killing free radicals is a good thing. So is, at the age of 67, having a skin renewal rate of a 29-year-old. Idebenol makes it happen.


