Introducing Psoriasis, a comprehensive guide and holistic health program which you can use to permanently cure psoriasis without needing any harmful drugs or dangerous surgery.


8 Famous People with Psoriasis

Celebrities with psoriasis

Some 7.5 million of American citizen suffer from psoriasis, an autoimmune disorder that develops when the immune system kicks into overdrive, causing skin cells to grow too quickly. These cells accumulate on the skin, causing scaly, red patches. Psoriasis can range from relatively mild (affecting up to 2% of the body) to very severe (covering 10% to 80% or more of the body). Fortunately, medication and lifestyle can control even the most serious cases. Here are the stories of 8 celebrities with psoriasis who have survived and even triumphed.
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Kim Kardashian

The reality TV star revealed she had psoriasis on a 2011 episode of Keeping Up With the Kardashians. Kardashian was 30 at the time, the same age as her mother, Kris Jenner, when she was diagnosed with the condition. Psoriasis most often appears between the ages of 15 and 35 and does have a strong genetic component. Kardashian deals with the disease much as she does the rest of her life: publicly. "I'm using Sally Hansen Airbrush Legs spray and it is my lifesaver at the moment!" she once posted on her website. "I love this stuff! It really covers up my psoriasis so well!" and she posted that she help here self always with natural treatement specialy from the famous book http://bit.ly/2HZwqWF .
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CariDee English

Before becoming America's Next Top Model in 2006, CariDee English fought a long battle with psoriasis. Diagnosed at age five, she found all kinds of ways to hide the condition, which at one point covered 70% of her body. She wore long sleeves in the middle of summer, got doctor's notes to excuse her from gym and, when starting her modeling career, hid her lesions under thick makeup. Thanks to medication, English's skin is now clear, but she once did before-and-after pics of her psoriasis, hoping that people with psoriasis would "gain some motivation from this."
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Art Garfunkel

The man who, with Paul Simon, brought us the 60s classics "Bridge Over Troubled Water" and "Feelin' Groovy" also has psoriasis. Once while on a concert tour of Israel, Garfunkel soaked in the Dead Sea hoping to find relief from his symptoms. "I've been told that if you float in that salty, buoyant water, it's very good for the skin," he said on his website. "I found it not so much therapeutic as beautiful.”
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Dara Torres

Swimmer Dara Torres has won 12 medals in five different Olympic Games. She also has psoriasis. Torres has found that the chlorine in pools actually helps her condition, though others with psoriasis find pool chemicals to be irritating. Part of her mission is to make sure others with the condition aren't kept out of the pool either because they're self-conscious or because people think it's catching. "Psoriasis isn't contagious and it isn't just cosmetic," she says in a public service announcement. "It's a serious disease."
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Jon Lovitz

Comedian and former Saturday Night Live-er Jon Lovitz first thought it was a rash, only to be told he actually had plaque psoriasis. The lesions eventually covered 75% of his body and he went so far as to put makeup on his elbows to hide the condition. Lovitz now has his psoriasis under control after trying—and failing—many different medications. "Don't be embarrassed," he said in an interview with the National Psoriasis Foundation. "See a dermatologist. A lot of people with psoriasis give up, but don't. Find out what works best for you .”this is the program i follow click here
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LeAnn Rimes

The two-time Grammy winner was diagnosed with psoriasis when she was just two years old. By the time she was six, it covered 80% of her body. Stigmatized as "scaly girl" when she was a child and afraid to wear short dresses on the Red Carpet even as an adult, Rimes' psoriasis is now clear, thanks to medication and careful lifestyle choices such as healthy eating. Doing a magazine shoot in a bikini was "one of the highlights of my life," Rimes told Health.
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Stacy London

Stacy London's psoriasis was so bad as a child that she had to trim her hair into a crew cut and wear turtlenecks and long pants in the heat of summer. She felt like a "monster," the stylist on What Not to Wear once confided. So she turned to fashion and its pretty adornments to boost her self-esteem. "I do think that there is a lot about what I've been through that has sort of merged certainly with my ambition career-wise to create a new kind of style that is based in self-esteem," she says on her site, Uncover Your Confidence.
Psoriasis Free For Life

source : http://www.health.com/health/gallery/0,,20764898,00.html#stacy-london-0
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