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Aromatherapy for the Mind, Body & Spirit - Sandalwood Essential Oil
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Managing Acne and Dispelling Myths
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Wild Oregano Oil – Nature’s Miracle Herb
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About Acne - What can you do to cure or alleviate acne?
Acne gives the combination of symptoms like greasy skin, white
heads, black heads, pimples, inflammation and scar formation.
Acne mostly affects young people in the age 14 - 25, but also
sometimes older persons, like women in their menopause. Most
teenagers experience outburst of acne, some only little, but for
others acne may develop into a serious skin ailment with great
cosmetic impact.
THE SKIN ANATOMY
To understand the acne process, some knowledge about skin
anatomy and physiology is essential:
The skin has there layers: The outer layer called epidermis
consists of epithelial cells. Under this lies the dermis
consisting of connective tissue. At the bottom there is a layer
called the hypodermis consisting mostly of fat cells.
The skin has narrow pores extending from the surface down to the
top of the sub-dermis, called hair follicles. A hair extend from
a growth zone in the bottom of each hair follicle and out at the
skin surface. Around the hair in the dermis, there are small
glands called sebaceous glands. These glands produce a fatty
substance, sebum, which empty through the follicle opening and
lubricates the hair and the skin.
THE ACNE PROCESS
Acne starts by the glands in the hair follicles increasing their
sebum production. This will in the beginning only cause greasy
skin. Eventually the sebum in the entrance of the follicles
mixes with dead epithelial cells. This mix reacts chemically to
forms hard props, comedones that close the pore entrances.
According to the color of the comedones, they are called black
heads or white heads.
Then the closed hair follicle gets filled with sebum and swell.
The swollen follicle then gets infected by bacteria. The
bacteria and the accumulated sebum cause the follicle and the
surrounding skin to get inflamed, forming a pimple. At last the
inflamed follicle burst and empties its content. Eventually the
affected area heals. Sometimes the inflammation reaches deep
into the skin surrounding the follicle and destroys skin tissue.
This will cause more or less distinct scars that may reside
permanently. Typically an affected person will have follicles in
all these stages of the process at any given time.
THE CAUSES OF ACNE
The increased hormone production in the puberty stimulates to
increased sebum production. The male hormone, testosterone, seem
to contribute most. Also girls begin to produce more
testosterone in the puberty. Also in other periods, altered
hormone production may give acne, for example by women in the
menopause.
Since not all teens get acne in any degree, the increased
hormone level cannot be the whole cause of the increased sebum
production. The follicles of affected persons must for some
reason react stronger upon the higher hormone level.
Dietary factors, like eating too much fat, too much sugar or the
wrong kind of fat may aggravate acne by some individuals. Lack
of vitamins, minerals and essential fatty acids may also
contribute to development of acne.
Poor digestion, lazy colon and constipation aggravate acne in
some individuals, probably due to productions of toxins in the
intestines. Lazy colon may be caused by dietary faults, like
lack of fiber.
Very frequent washing and use of strong soaps aggravate acne,
and does not alleviate the condition as many think. Rubbing,
scrubbing or squeezing the skin may also aggravate acne.
Here are some other factors that may contribute in causing acne
or aggravating the condition.
- Stress - Some contraceptive agents - Environmental or domestic
pollution. - Humid environments. - Some antidepressants. -
Testosterone and anabolic steroids used for treatment or by
body-building. - Use of some types of greasy cosmetic products.
- Some antiperspirant products. - Exposing the skin for chlorine
or other halogens, or medicines containing halogens. - Women may
get aggravated acne 2-7 days before menstruation.
WHAT CAN YOU DO YOURSELF TO AVOID OR TO TREAT ACNE
Sometimes Acne is so severe that special medical treatment is
required, and sometimes the causes of acne necessitate medical
treatment. But you can do much yourself also. Here are listed
things you can do yourself to prevent or treat acne:
1. Some advices about diet that may help prevent and cure acne:
- Do not consume a great amount of fat. - The fat you
add to the
food should be natural oils. Olive oil is ideal, but use other
types of oils too, like walnut oil, sunflower oil and soy oil.
However, do not use only soy oil as many tend to do. Using only
soy oil will give you too much of some fatty acids and too less
of others. - Eat much fish, seafood and not so much meat. - Eat
food with a high fiber content to regulate the digestion, like
vegetables, whole cereals, full corn bread and fruit.
2. Here are some things you should avoid.
- Do not use greasy or heavy cosmetics that clog your skin and
are difficult to wash away. - Do not use strong irritating
antiperspirants. - Do not wash with strong soap or cleaners that
dry up your skin and take away all the natural oily protection
in your skin. - If you perform body-building, do not use
anabolic steroids or other hormonal supplements. - Use clothes
that allow air to reach your body surface to avoid collection of
humidity and overheating of your skin.
3. Use of rinsing milk or solutions
You can rinse your skin with mild products especially made to
dissolve the plugs in your pores, and to make the environment in
your skin unfriendly to bacteria causing infection. Some of
these products are just products to wash your skin with one ore
more times a day; others should be on during night and flushed
away in the morning.
Salicylic acid is a mild ingredient often used in these products
to dissolve the comedones. The products usually also contain
ingredients that work antibacterial and stimulate the skin's own
cleaning activities, like Tea tree oil or Echinacea extract.
4. Use of gels and creams to treat acne and protect your skin
After the rinsing, you should apply some treatment gel, cream or
lotion onto your skin to achieve these effects:
- To make your skin soft and elastic. - To protect your skin
against the environment. - To acts further to dissolve the
clogging of your pores. - To soothe and alleviate inflammation.
- To kill the bacteria causing infection or make an environment
hostile for the bacteria. - To stimulate the skin to clean
itself. - To stimulate the skin to heal. - To be used as a
isolating layer between the skin itself and cosmetics
In order to protect, make the skin soft and further dissolve the
comedones, many products contain natural plant oils that are
easily absorbed into the epidermis, like Tea tree oil, Rose hip
oil, Lavender oil and Olive oil.
Ingredients used in products to reduce inflammation and to
stimulate healing may be: Aloe Vera extract, Viola Tricolour
extract, Rose hip oil, Vitamin E and Vitamin A.
Tea tree oil and Grapefruit seed extract are natural
antibacterial agents used in many of these products. In other
products artificial compounds like Benzoyl peroxide are used.
5. Oral supplements to fight the acne process and nourish the
skin
Supplements taken by mouth to nourish your skin may be useful.
The purpose of these supplements is more or less the same as
that of nourishing creams.
- To make the sebum more fluid so it drains more easily. - To
stimulate the substance exchange and cleaning processes in your
skin, - To stimulate your skin to heal, - To give your skin
building nutrients necessary to heal.
Ingredients often used in these supplements to stimulate the
cleaning and healing processes in the skin are: Vitamins A, C,
B1, B2, B3, B6, C, D, E, Folic acid, Beta carotene,
Bioflavonoids, Magnesium, Copper, Zinc, selenium, anti-oxidants
from Green tea, Metylsulfonyl methane.
Nutrient found in these products used as material to rebuild
damaged skin and to give a sebum with better consistency are:
Evening primrose oil, Olive oil, Flax seed oil, Borage oil, Soy
oil, Wheat germ oil and Lecithin.
Gum guggul extract used in oral products has an anti-biotic
effect, and helps against spreading of the acne infection and
thus helps against scar formation.
About the author:
Knut Holt is an internet consultant and marketer focusing on
health items. Please go here to find innovative medicines
against acne, eczema, scars, wrinkles, other skin problems and
natural anti-aging supplements for the skin and the whole
body:---
http://www.abicana.com/shop4.htm
---Free to reprint and reformat as long as the author's name,
his link and his information follow
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Acne.org |
Information on acne, medications and treatment of scars. Includes a regimen for keeping skin clear. |
www.acne.org |
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AcneNet |
Dermatologist-reviewed information about acne, which lets people know that today virtually every case of acne can be resolved. |
www.skincarephysicians.com |
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What is Acne? |
Information about the different types of acne lesions and what causes acne to develop. |
www.skincarephysicians.com |
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Questions and Answers About Acne |
Illustrated information on causes of acne skin lesions, and tips and information on common treatments, their side effects, and current research. |
www.niams.nih.gov |
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Acne Resource Center |
Acne, Nutrition, Research on Acne and Important Tips for Getting Acne Free. |
www.acne-resource.org |
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Acne - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
Acne is a group of skin rashes that have different causes. Acne vulgaris - most commonly experienced around puberty, typically of the face and ... |
en.wikipedia.org |
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Acne vulgaris - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
Different types of Acne Vulgaris: A: Cystic acne on the face, B: ... The vernacular term bacne or backne is often used to indicate acne found specifically ... |
en.wikipedia.org |
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MedlinePlus: Acne |
From the National Institutes of Health; Questions and Answers about Acne (National Institute of ... Select services and providers for Acne in your area. ... |
www.nlm.nih.gov |
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MedlinePlus Interactive Tutorials: Acne |
Acne. Start Tutorial. Starts multimedia presentation with questions. Requires Flash Player. Download Flash. download button for flash player. ... |
www.nlm.nih.gov |
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Acne Treatment by AcneHelper.com |
Resource for acne treatments and prevention. Learn tips and techniques to stop pimples, zits and blackheads for good. |
www.acnehelper.com |
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Acne |
Acne Creative bring brands to life through advertising, design and product ... Commercials, music videos and other film formats are made by Acne Film. ... |
www.acne.se |
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Acne Jeans |
About · Collection · Acne Studios · Contact · Press/Retailer · Work at Acne Jeans · Newsletter · Shop (EU). Copyright © Acne Jeans. |
www.acnejeans.com |
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Acne |
If you're almost a teen, chances are pretty good that you have some acne. About 8 in 10 preteens and teens have acne, along with many adults. |
www.kidshealth.org |
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Acne - treatment and causes of pimples and blackheads |
What are the causes of acne and which skin treatments are most effective - BUPA health information factsheet. |
hcd2.bupa.co.uk |
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Natural Acne Treatment Information |
Acne and Diet · The Risks and Side Effects of Prescription Acne Medications ... This is a great jumping off point for natural acne treatments. ... |
www.absoluteacneinfo.com |
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ASG www.stopspots.org ! | Index Acne, Pimples, Blackheads, Zits ... |
Information and support on acne, including top ten tips, beauty tips and problems. |
www.stopspots.org |
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Acne.net - Acne & Skin Treatment Resource |
Introduction to several forms of acne and some available treatments, by a dermatologist and medical school professor. |
www.acne.net |
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Acne.com - Acne Treatment Information |
Acne.com - Acne Treatment Information. Your source for Acne information on the web. Learn more about what causes acne and how you can fight acne. |
www.acne.com |
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Acne – Complete medical information regarding acne and its ... |
Complete medical explanation produced by doctors regarding acne, its causes, myths of causes, treatment on your own, and treatment by doctors. |
www.medicinenet.com |
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AAD - Acne |
Acne is a skin condition which has plugged pores (blackheads and whiteheads), inflamed pimples (pustules), and deeper lumps (nodules). |
www.aad.org |
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