Inside the pore are sebaceous glands which produce sticky sebum. When the outer layers of skin shed (as it does continuously), the dead skin cells left behind may become ‘glued’ together by the sticky sebum. This causes a blockage in the pore, especially when the skin becomes thicker at puberty [1]. The sebaceous glands produce more sebum which builds up behind the blockage, and this sebum harbours bacteria (P.Acnes bacteria). Since the body’s natural defence against bacteria is primarily phagocytes (white blood cells), these rush to the site behind the blockage (where the bacteria are). This is what gives some pimples the ‘whiteheads’ (unless the Phagocytes are deeper in the skin, which means you can’t see the ‘white’ caused by them). The white blood cells then destroy (by phagocytosis) the bacteria to prevent infection.
Treatment:
Common over-the-counter medications for pimples are Benzoyl peroxide and/or salicylic acid. Both medications can be found in many creams and gels used to treat acne through topical application. Both medications help skin slough off easier, which helps to remove bacteria faster. A regimen of keeping the affected skin area clean plus the regular application of these topical medications is usually enough to keep acne under control, if not at bay altogether. 1-2% of the population is allergic to Benzoyl peroxide treatments. (source: google.com)









this is not comment this is Q…….?i have pimpleon my cheeks every week i have one pimple plzz tell me what i am do and the black spot can u mail me on this ID i live in karachi so tell me which product i am use &home tipss
thanxxxxxxxxxxxxxx:)
Comment by kasaf — January 1, 2008 @ 4:32 pm
kanwal_kasaf@hotmail.com this is my id
Comment by kasaf — January 1, 2008 @ 4:35 pm