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2007-08-01 19:03:08 · 12 answers · asked by rtyui 2 in Health Diseases & Conditions Skin Conditions

12 answers

infection

2007-08-01 19:05:16 · answer #1 · answered by razorblade romance 4 · 0 1

1

2016-05-26 13:33:25 · answer #2 · answered by Candice 3 · 0 0

Dry and/or greasy skin due to poor oil composition of the skin. Thick greasy oils clog pores, lack of oil leads to dryness and irritation. You need thin oils to moisturize while dissolving and clearing gunk in your poors. Try fish oil or seafood. 2 tsp fish oil a day or 4 servings of seafood a week. Stick it out for at least 2 months; it will take a long time to replace all your oil. Any effect after 1-2 days is temporary or random; so even if it makes you break out a little at first, you haven't given it a full try yet.

In the short term you can wash and moisturize well, but that will only go so far. Plus excessive washing can be drying and excessive moisturizing can be clogging. Use a small amount of a light moisturizer, made with oil not jelly or grease. Often that means soybean oil or mineral oil. Mineral oil means mined from the ground. So soybean oil is usually better, though mineral oil won't cause too much harm. Clean with soap and water, not a harsh acne cleanser. Even then they only work so well. So you really need the seafood.

Antibiotics aren't really good for bacteria long term, they'll come back in force after. Short term they may help. After you get off them find some kefir with acidophilus listed first or 2nd to replace the friendly bacteria they destroyed. Studies show less illness when you have these bacteria, even outside the stomach in places such as the lungs and elsewhere. You want friendly bacteria to fill the void when the antibiotics stop, not harmful ones.

In the short term you might also try 100,000+ iu retinol vitamin A (a megadose, and too much for normal use) or one of the acne drugs that is similar to retinol vitamin A. It's some minor harm to your organs, but it helps against bacteria on your skin. At least it doesn't have the other long term drawbacks to your skin that antibiotics and many scrubs do.

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2016-05-20 07:20:21 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The exact causes of acne are unknown, but it is believed that it can result from several factors, primarily, an increase in hormones called androgens, which both males and females have. Increases in androgens cause your oil glands to enlarge and produce more oil. This oil can also change into a thick white substance called sebum. An increased oil production clogs your pores with oil and sebum that can breakdown the cellular walls in your pores, which causes bacteria to grow and pimples to develop.

Some researchers also believe that your chances of developing acne can be greatly influenced by genetics. The use of certain drugs containing androgens and lithium are known to cause acne. The use of greasy cosmetics can also lead to acne because they plug your cell follicles and promote bacterial growth.

Overall it is an infection.

2007-08-01 19:08:13 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

During your teen years your body starts to do some funky things while it grows up, including producing more testosterone (a male hormone found in females as well as males, but in varying amounts), which tells your body to start producing more oil. As a result, the dead skin cells mix with the oil and clog your pores, causing zits.

2007-08-01 19:05:51 · answer #5 · answered by ~brigit~ 5 · 1 1

Theres a type of cell (can't remember the name) that goes around and essentially swallows bacteria and kills them off and that is the accumulation of those cells. Its part of your bodies defensive against infection.

2007-08-01 19:05:52 · answer #6 · answered by ArachnidDemon 4 · 0 0

Grease.

2007-08-01 19:08:19 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Dead white blood cells. White blood cells fight against infection.

2007-08-01 19:06:17 · answer #8 · answered by edtkkfif 2 · 1 0

mostly dead white blood cells come to fight the infection.

2007-08-01 19:06:10 · answer #9 · answered by Mike1942f 7 · 1 0

pus??

2007-08-01 19:06:04 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

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