Wednesday, 16 October 2013

ACNE - ACNE TREATMENT



Mike Walden review author of acne no more program-It is a chronic disease of the pilosebaceous unit characterized by the appearance on the trunk and face a diverse rash combined with intense oily skin. Induced hyperactivity of the sebaceous gland duct obstruction. The skin oils are trademarks in acne.

The sebaceous glands produce sebum that is a mixture of lipids which after effect of microorganisms can be converted into free fatty acids irritants causing acne lesions. The more severe form of acne, the greater is the production of sebum.

The acne is not an infectious disease and is not spread from one person to another. But both the skin surface and the pilosebaceous important resource colonized by microorganisms such as propionic acid bacterium of acne, epidermal aureus and pityrosporum oval of which the first is predominant. Thus various treatments which reduce microorganisms improve the clinical picture. The activity of the sebaceous glands under the control of androgen and highly correlated with the levels of free testosterone.

Typical signs of acne is intense oiliness of the skin, the comedones, the canary, the red papules and pustules, nodules, cysts, scars, keloids and post inflammatory hyperpigmentation.

Factors that affect acne are:
Climatic conditions. The disease is worse in warm, humid and tropical climatic conditions.
Drugs. Various formulations topically applied as a cosmetic oil or other substances such as brilliantine applied to the scalp can cause clogging pilosebaceous resources resulting in the appearance of comedones and akmoeidon lesions.
Exclusion conditions of the skin. The tight fitting clothes cause conditions exclusion of pilosebaceous resources resulting in people who wear them to show akmoeides rash on thighs and buttocks. Also prolonged stay in seats of plastic leads to sweating and over wetting of the skin resulting in follicular obstruction and causing acne lesions.
Industrial causes. Industrial workers have akmoeideis damage when exposed to halogenated hydrocarbons (chloracne).





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