Hand cream

Dec. 10th, 2012 09:38 am
jack: Glowing recycle symbol (getting things done)
[personal profile] jack
I got some generic moisturiser from Tesco and in the short term it helped a lot. If it doesn't solve the problem I'll see if I can get something more heavyweight.

Looking at my hands I'm a little shocked at how cracked they'd got. I'd mentally consigned this to the category of "little things to sort out when I have time, after all, other people have real problems, surely I shouldn't complain about some cracked skin". But it did look a bit like I beat up a brick wall in a boxing match :)

I still only have a partial understanding of what constitutes "moisturiser"/"aqueous"/"emollient" and which brands are fall under one general umbrella term, and which brands represent something qualitatively different.

Date: 2012-12-10 08:24 pm (UTC)
karen2205: Me with proper sized mug of coffee (Default)
From: [personal profile] karen2205
"aqueous cream" itself comes in big pots and is meant to be used as a soap substitute, rather than as a moisturising cream as if used as a moisturiser for long periods it can lead to allergic reactions.

Other than that most moisturisers are approximately the same (I'd check labels for any ingredients you know you might react to) and the principle is to apply lots of it often, rather than to apply it sparingly and infrequently.

Thicker substances, often labelled "ointments" can be used overnight, with cotton gloves to cover you hands after you've applied the ointment.