That kind of claim (“it looks like I’ve had plastic surgery!” from a homemade remedy) is almost always marketing exaggeration, not medical reality.
Here’s what’s actually going on:
🧴 1. Wrinkles and age spots don’t “erase” with home tricks
- Wrinkles form from collagen loss, sun exposure, and skin thinning
- Age spots (sun spots) are due to melanin buildup from UV damage
No homemade remedy can structurally rebuild skin like that in a dramatic way.
At best, some DIY mixtures may:
- temporarily hydrate the skin
- make it look slightly smoother or brighter for a few hours
☀️ 2. The biggest real factor: sun damage
Hands and arms age faster because they get constant UV exposure. The only things proven to help are:
- Daily sunscreen (SPF 30+)
- Retinoids (vitamin A derivatives) to stimulate collagen
- Vitamin C or niacinamide for pigmentation
- Moisturizers with urea or ceramides
These can gradually improve texture and spots—but not overnight.
⚠️ 3. Be careful with “viral homemade remedies”
Many trending mixes (lemon juice, baking soda, toothpaste, hydrogen peroxide, etc.) can:
- irritate or burn skin
- worsen pigmentation over time
- damage the skin barrier (making aging look worse)
Especially lemon juice + sunlight = higher risk of dark spots due to phototoxic reactions.
💡 4. What does give noticeable improvement?
If someone truly wants a “younger-looking hands/arms” effect, dermatology options include:
- chemical peels (glycolic/lactic acid)
- laser treatment for sun spots
- microneedling for collagen stimulation
- prescription retinoids
These are what people often mistake for “plastic surgery level” changes—not home remedies.
🧠 Bottom line
If something claims dramatic, fast reversal of wrinkles and age spots at home, it’s almost always:
- exaggerated results
- temporary glow effect
- or marketing hype
If you want, you can share the exact “remedy” you saw, and I can break down whether it’s harmless, useless, or risky.