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Greenbrier Spa West Virginia wins Mobil honors

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The Greenbrier Spa once again wins Mobil honors

The Mobil Travel Guide has honored The Greenbrier Spa for the fourth straight year as one of “America’s Best Hotel and Resort Spas” and has given the spa a Four-Star rating.

As one of the spas on this year’s list, The Greenbrier Spa is among the elite 86 to have met the criteria for a Four-Star ranking. In the four-year history of the listing, only three spas have received a Five-Star rating. Each of the featured spas underwent anonymous inspections and was rated on more than 450 service standards and criteria.

“This is an elite group of spas and we are honored to be included. We are committed to providing the highest level of guest service and an exceptional spa experience,” said Michael Gordon, general manager of The Greenbrier.

According to the Mobil Travel Guide website, a Four-Star Spa provides “a luxurious experience with expanded amenities in an elegant and serene environment.” Other qualities include personalized service and an extensive selection of treatments.

“This award recognizes the dedication of our entire team,” said Cassandra Sessa, Director of Spa Services at The Greenbrier. “Given today’s competitive spa market, this is quite an honor.”

The legendary Greenbrier Spa has 72 employees, many of whom have more than 20 years of service. The spa is one of the few American spas to follow the European treatment of using freshly-drawn and natural mineral and sulphur waters. The 40,000 square-foot spa includes relaxation rooms, private tubs, and Swiss showers as well as steam, sauna and therapy rooms for massage and body wraps. Treatments specifically for men in the spa, teens and ‘tweens are also available. Body fusions, manicures, pedicures and waxing services complete the range of offerings at The Greenbrier Spa.

Known for its natural ingredients and use of indigenous minerals, the resort has launched a new set of refreshing treatments just in time for summer. These sweet treats allow guests to pamper themselves and include a Chocolate Covered Strawberries Body Wrap, a Fruit Smoothie Body Scrub and Wrap and Fruit Smoothie Manicure and Pedicure.

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Toenail Fungus - What is it - How to Cure, Retore and Prevent

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Toenail Fungus (Onychomycosis)

What Is It?

Toenail fungus, also called onychomycosis, is a relatively common condition that disfigures and sometimes destroys the nail. This problem can be caused by several different types of fungi (microscopic organisms related to mold and mildew). These fungi thrive in the dark, moist and stuffy environment inside shoes. As they grow, fungi feed on keratin, the tough protein that makes up the hard surface of the toenails. In most cases, the fungus belongs to a group of fungi called dermatophytes, which include Trichophyton rubrum and Trichophyton interdigitale. Other, less common causes of onychomycosis include yeasts and molds.

Toenail fungus affects 2% to 18% of all people worldwide and 3% to 5% of people in the United States. It is relatively rare in children, affecting only about 1 out of every 200 people younger than 18. However, the likelihood of getting toenail fungus increases with age. Up to 48% of people have at least one affected toe by the time they reach age 70. Although 2.5 million Americans see a podiatrist annually for treatment of toenail fungus, many more are infected but never seek help. Some people consider toenail fungus just a cosmetic problem and don’t bother seeking treatment.

Almost anyone who wears tight-fitting shoes or tight hosiery is more likely to develop toenail fungus, especially if they also practice poor foot hygiene. Another risk is wearing layers of toenail polish, which doesn’t allow the nail to breathe. Also, because toenail fungi may spread from foot to foot on the floors of showers and locker rooms, fungal infections of the toenails are especially common among military personnel, athletes and miners. The condition also tends to affect people with chronic illnesses, such as diabetes or HIV, as well as people with circulatory problems that decrease blood flow to the toes. However, many people have no clear risk factors.

Of all the toenails, those on the big toe and little toe are the most likely to develop a toenail fungus. This may be partly because the big toe and little toe are constantly exposed to the mild trauma of friction from the sides of shoes.

Symptoms

When a toenail develops a fungal infection, it typically turns yellow or brown and becomes thick and overgrown. Foul-smelling debris also may accumulate under the nail, especially at the sides and tip. As the infection continues, the nail either may crumble gradually and fall off or become so thick that the affected toe feels uncomfortable or painful inside shoes.

In a less common variety of toenail fungus, called white superficial onychomycosis, the nail turns white rather than yellow or brown, and the surface becomes soft, dry and powdery.

Diagnosis

After you describe your foot symptoms, your doctor will ask you about any factors that may increase your risk of toenail fungus. These include a high-risk occupation, sports participation, tight-fitting shoes or hosiery, poor foot hygiene or the use of heavy toenail polish. Your doctor will ask whether you have a history of poor circulation, diabetes, HIV or any other illness that may decrease your resistance to infection or interfere with blood flow to your toes.

Because psoriasis sometimes can cause nail problems that look similar to a fungal infection, your doctor may ask whether you or anyone in your family has psoriasis. In some people with psoriasis, the nails are the only part of the body affected. The skin is largely spared. Also, it is possible for psoriasis and a fungal infection to affect the same toenail.

If you and your doctor decide that your nail problem is important, the doctor will examine your affected toenail or toenails. To confirm that you have a fungal infection, your doctor will take small samples of the affected nails and send them to a laboratory. The nail samples will be examined under a microscope and will be checked for fungi and other microorganisms.

Expected Duration

Toenail fungus rarely heals on its own. It is usually a chronic (long-lasting) condition that gradually worsens to involve more and more of the nail. Even if the affected nail comes off, the new nail that grows usually is infected with fungus.

Prevention

To help to prevent toenail fungus:

Wear comfortable shoes and hosiery that allow your feet some “breathing space.”

Wear shoes, sandals or flip-flops in community showers or locker rooms.

Wash your feet every day, dry them thoroughly, and use a good-quality foot powder.

Wear clean socks or stockings every day.

Keep your toenails trimmed.

Disinfect pedicure tools before you use them.

Treatment

Treatment may begin with your doctor removing as much of the infected nail as possible. This can be done by trimming the nail with clippers, filing it down, or dissolving it away with a paste that contains urea and bifonazole.

If the infection is mild and limited to a small area of your nail, your doctor may prescribe a medicated nail polish containing either amorolfine (Loceryl) or ciclopirox (Loprox). You should apply the nail polish twice a week until your nail is cured.

If the infection is in a wider area of your nail, or several nails, your doctor will prescribe an oral antifungal medication, such as itraconazole (Sporanox) or terbinafine (Lamisil). Either itraconazole or terbinafine can be taken daily for 12 weeks, or a higher dose of itraconazole can be taken for one week per month for three months. Both itraconazole and terbinafine occasionally cause troublesome side effects, and itraconazole has the potential to produce serious drug interactions.

In very severe cases, when toenail fungus is resistant to treatment, it may be necessary to remove the nail surgically.

When To Call A Professional

You may want to make an appointment to see your family doctor or podiatrist if you notice that a portion of your toenail has become abnormally thick or discolored. Call your doctor promptly if any problem involving your feet or toes makes walking painful or difficult.

Prognosis

Most people treated with an oral antifungal medicine are cured after 12 weeks of therapy. However, even after the fungus is dead, the nail may not immediately or ever become clear and normal-looking.

After successful treatment with itraconazole or terbinafine, the fungus returns in approximately 10% to 20% of people.

Additional Info

National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases

Information Clearinghouse

National Insitutes of Health

1 AMS Circle

Bethesda, MD 20892-3675

Phone: 301-495-4484

Toll-Free: 1-877-226-4267

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What a Handful …

Ten to Stay Cool This Summer With Hot Spa Products and Treatments

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10 Ways to Stay Cool This Summer With Hot Spa Products and Treatments

If the thought of baring your pasty, dry, winter skin makes you feel more than a little apprehensive leading spa professionals from the International SPA Association have you covered with some of the best new products, summertime spa treatments and services just in time for summer! There’s no doubt you’ll be turning the cabana boy’s head after a relaxing day at an ISPA member spa prepping for the hot months ahead.

“If you’re planning a long vacation, weekend trip or several hours at your neighbor’s pool, ISPA members have come up with creative ways to take a spa break this summer,” said ISPA President Lynne McNees. “With more than 57 million spa-goers in the United States alone, day spas are great places to learn about proper use of sunscreen, healthy ways to lose weight as well as quick fixes for summertime hair, summertime nails and summertime skin, which are issues on our minds during the summer months.”

As ISPA represents 3,000 members in 75 countries, it is always summer somewhere and there are certainly many spas and product companies that focus on getting you ready for the heat.

– Beach beauties will have it made in the shade with the new spa

collection of Physician Endorsed skin-savvy hats. The eco-friendly,

soft, easy-to-pack hats are available in 15 styles and an array of

colors. The best part about the hats is that they have guaranteed sun

protection of SPF 30.

SpaTerre at La Playa Beach and Golf Resort in Naples, Fla., is

focusing on wellness and sleep. The “Wellness Pure & Simple” class

involves nutritional guidance, personal training, yoga, Pilates, full-

body skin care, massage therapy and natural nail and hair care. The

“Summer Sunset Slumber” program is designed to encourage great sleep

while teaching you how to carry those habits back into your daily

life.

– Take a stroll this summer at The Spa of Colonial Williamsburg in

Virginia. The spa is offering Nordic walking classes that utilize

poles to help burn up to 25 percent more calories.

– A bit of Spain in Colorado as The Bachelor Gulch Spa at The Ritz-

Carlton offers a poolside spa tapas treatment menu. The 15-minute

sessions include massages for the scalp, neck and shoulders, hands and

feet, and the back as well as sunscreen application so you don’t miss

those hard-to-reach spots.

– ThermaFuse will keep sea or pool water from spoiling your fun by

offering a Summer Hair Essentials kit. The kit includes condition

spray-on, leave-in detangler, styling creme, frizz-eliminating spray,

and a wide-tooth comb.

– Get swimsuit ready at Nob Hill Spa at the Huntington Hotel in San

Francisco. Enjoy their “Sensation Skin and Scalp” treatment which

includes a detoxifying dry brush exfoliation followed by an ayurvedic

hot oil scalp massage. And don’t forget your toes as the “City View

Patio Pedicure” offers the opportunity to overlook downtown as you sip

champagne and are treated to a pedicure.

The Boulders Resort & Golden Door Spa in Carefree, Ariz., has a new

Aloe Pear Summer Scrub” inspired by the resort’s organic garden. The

50-minute service features a frothy lemon meringue pie and organic

aloe gel. Another new feature is the Golden Door’s take on the

traditional afternoon tea. Spa guests can sip on herbal teas, snack on

finger sandwiches and other treats while wrapped in spa robes.

– Planet Botanicals has a new certified-organic face balm with East

African Shea Butter that will combat dryness from sun exposure and is

packaged in an approved size for flying.

– You don’t have to be a Southern Belle to love the offerings at

Viridian Day Spa in Charleston, S.C. “Dreaming of the Beach” is a

customized body buff/polish and intense moisturizer to exfoliate,

smooth and help skin glow. The “Sunburn Rx” treatment is a cooling

soak for the “oops” days when you get a little too much sun. Also this

summer, the spa will give clients an educational card about the proper

way to apply sunscreen.

– Relax by the water as you enjoy complimentary poolside butler service

when you are a guest at Pala Casino Spa and Resort in California.

Every hour an attendant will apply Kerstin Florian SPF 30 sun

protection to guests’ skin, along with lavender body spray and aloe

gel. In each guest room, there will be a Poolside Prep Kit filled with

Kerstin Florian products including Chamomile Body Scrub, Chamomile

Shower/Bath Gel, a loofah and of course, sunscreen.

Summertime Spa Treatments … to sooth and protect and restore

Summer Skincare Beauty Tips:

Can overdoing facial treatments damage skin your skin?

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Overdoing facial treatments can damage skin

Aggressive facial treatments such as microdermabrasion and chemical peels are as common as the weekly manicure. Facial treatments, once thought of as severe, are now considered a means to recapturing youth. But is this quest for skin perfection causing more harm than good? “Women are peel crazy. They will go from one office to the next and get peels everywhere . . . and will not let you know they are doing this,” said Jewels Deyo, an aesthetician at Moss Wellness Center in Scottsdale.

Beauty products have kept pace. At-home microdermabrasion kits, peels and masks line drugstore shelves, allowing women to take dermatology into their own hands.

Facial cleansers contain higher levels of benzoyl peroxide than in the past, which can strip the skin if used daily, said Tina Seitz, aesthetician manager at Moss Wellness Center.

“Overprocessed skin is not healthy skin,” said Kathy Krakora, owner of Scosh Makeup & Skincare Studio in Scottsdale. “Pairing chemical peels with microdermabrasion, a mechanical peel, can be a fairly aggressive procedure, as they are both skin resurfacing methods. Used together, they can potentially cause serious damage.”

Side effects can range from pinker to redder skin, more sensitive skin and very dry or oily skin, she says. Problems occur because the skin’s transepidermal barrier, the top layer that holds in moisture and protects skin, is lost.

African-American women, with more sensitive skin, can experience keloid scarring when the area heals and leaves a darker, raised scar, she says.

Microdermabrasion, a treatment that increases cell renewal and stimulates collagen growth, accounts for most of Krakora’s business, and she continues to see an increase in requests. She believes the treatment is extremely effective but cautions clients not to overdo it. Allowing enough time in between treatments and complying with aftercare instructions is crucial, Krakora said.

“Just like exercising your body, if it is overdone and does not have a chance to heal, then it is going to hurt it,” Seitz said. “The same with the peels and microdermabrasion - if you do not have time to heal, then you are actually breaking the collagen down rather than building it up.”

These treatments are fine to get, said Miriam Cummings, a dermatologist specializing in cosmetic care at Southwest Skin Specialists in Scottsdale, but adds that a dermatologist should be involved before trying intense at-home or spa treatments. The way a person’s skin reacts to these types of procedures depends on an individual’s skin type, color and texture.

“You never know what you are dealing with. All these things need to be under the guide of a doctor and a physician-recommended aesthetician,” Cummings said.

Dermatologists attribute the popularity of these treatments to an image-driven society.

“People are more cosmetically aware now. One friend has something done, and they talk, and that is how things spread,” Cummings said.

Medical spas, commonly called medspas, are even in malls these days, and women can pop in during lunch for a quick peel.

“In everything in our society, more is better. They (the women) get good results the first time and want to do more of it,” Seitz said.

Peels and microdermabrasion used to be offered only in clinical settings, but today you can get these services in most day spas and some full-service salons.

“Just like anything else, once something becomes more accessible and affordable, you’ll have more people doing it and more people who overdo it,” she said.

This doesn’t mean women have to ditch spa days and drop their aestheticians. Crystal Olson of Scottsdale achieves compliment-worthy skin by getting just one microdermabrasion treatment a month.

She was reminded of the importance of moderation when she saw a woman who had overdone it.

“She was getting a lot of treatments. The last one she had was a laser/chemical-type thing, and it, to me, looked pretty severe,” Olson said. “I would never do that to my skin.”

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Avanti Day Resort - Spa returns from fire as updated day resort

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Spa returns from fire as updated day resort

Stagflation? Recession? Bah! Sometimes you have to forget the troubles of a work-a-day world, milk the budget every now and then for a little extra and splurge for some special me-time.

Avanti Day Resort, in the Design Center on Route 9 south, Manalapan, now offers people a chance to do just that. Those who need to recharge their batteries can head to Avanti to be pampered, soothed or just generally cosseted.

Avanti Day Resort was formerly known as the Avanti Salon and Spa and had been at the same location since 1997 until a fire that is believed to have originated in a nail-dryer destroyed the former facility a year ago. The staff remained available to the spa’s clients over the past year, albeit scattered among a few area locations.

Now everyone is back under the same roof. Spokeswoman Ellen Canto said that in addition to a sophisticated getaway, Avanti is also offering its guests “an accessible escape for those seeking unsurpassed services and unique treatments, all in an exquisite environment with countless amenities.”

The new Avanti Day Resort is a recreation of the former salon and spa, with new services available in a new atmosphere that proves inviting upon first glance. The business is owned by Luda and Victor Conti.

A club atmosphere marks the entry area complete with music with a techno beat, while a door away waits the languor of massage music that lends itself more to the meditative than dance.

Products offered for sale in the retail boutique include a skin care line imported from Hungary which is also used in the facial services available in the skin care salon treatments.

Canto said the new resort was designed so that guests enjoy a “cozy ambiance” that flows in tandem with the convenience and luxury of having a world-class day spa that features a full service salon. Services available include medi-spa services, teeth whitening, barber services, and boutique shopping featuring unique home decor and jewelry.

Men’s tonsorial services are offered in a Male Executive Retreat.

All guests are greeted at the concierge services desk and upon checking in may then enjoy the complimentary café.

Guests arriving for hair services may relax at the Color Bar which features a magazine reading area, a television and Internet service, or peruse the Kérastase Paris Hair Spa which is a L’Oréal company.

Also Avanti are Yumi massage chairs which, according to Canto, are a new trend in the beauty industry and can only be found in the United States at Avanti.

All of the massage rooms, those for individuals or couples, have special Z-1 massage tables. The Z-1 tables also feature chromatherapy or color therapy and have a layer of gel and warm water underneath the cover so that clients feel like they are floating on warm water.

Canto said the Contis and their partner reinvented the salon and spa.

“The emphasis is on making guests feel as if they went to a destination spa or a spa resort,” Canto said.

The staff numbers almost 100 employees and will continue to introduce new services such as laser hair rejuvenation, new technology in hair extensions, hairstyle computer imaging, nutritional counseling, advanced detox and cellulite treatments, and cosmetic dentistry.

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