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Acne

Don't
Blame Bacteria for Causing Acne
by Naweko San-Joyz
All life forms
strategize to survive and
procreate.
Weeds, worms, birds, fungi and bacteria all work to sustain their own
lives on this planet. In fact, we humans survive because of the
biological games constantly unfolding in our mist.
Propionibacterium
acnes, or p acne bacteria, are
no
different. They want and need to survive. Skin bacteria perform an
important function. Bacteria use the secretions of our sweat and
sebaceous glands (sebum is the oil that makes our skin look shiny) as
nutrients. P acnes that are in balance with your body prevent
colonization by more harmful bacteria.
P acne bacteria only
encourage acne formations if
the
production of oil on the face is excessive. This surplus of oil is
prompted by hormonal, nutritional, environmental and/or psychological
changes in the body. So to prevent acne, you do not want to kill
bacteria per se, but keep the amount of bacteria on your skin at an
optimal balance. You optimize your oil secretion by understanding and
controlling your response to hormonal, nutritional, environmental
and/or psychological changes.
If we upset the
balance of bacteria in our bodies
by
taking antibiotics, our resident flora is upset and this enables
harmful bacteria (such as Staphylococcus aureus and Acinetobacter
baumannii) to colonize our skin. What’s more, antibiotics can destroy
the balance of intestinal flora and cause constipation.
In short, using
antibiotics on bacteria is a
battle
amongst intelligent parties involving the bacteria, the body, and the
human mind. If we fail to appreciate the bacteria as bodily maintenance
workers and continue dousing them with antibiotics, the bacteria just
become more resistant to our antibiotics. The bacteria are practiced at
playing dead as a tactic for survival. Even people who have used the
strongest acne drug on the market, Accutane, have witnessed the cunning
behavior of bacteria as zits reappear some months after using this
course of acne treatment. These people have discovered that bacteria do
not die; they silently and strategically multiply. If you do not want
your bacteria out of balance, do not provide them an environment
conducive to acne.
Health
author and
Stanford University graduate Naweko San-Joyz lovingly writes from her
home in San Diego. Her works include “Acne Messages: Crack the code of
your zits and say goodbye to acne” (ISBN: 0974912204) and the upcoming
work “Skinny Fat Chicks, Why we’re still not getting this dieting
thing” (ISBN: 0974912212) for release in June of 2005. For useful acne
self-help articles visit http://www.Noixia.com
Article
Source: http://EzineArticles.com/
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