What Is Acne?
Acne is a common skin disease that results when pores get
blocked and bacteria form inside them. It comes in a variety of
familiar forms and affects nearly everyone at some stage,
particularly in their teen years. The inflamed, red bumps that
sometimes form can be painful, and even painless white pimples
are unsightly.
In the surface of the skin are pores, tiny openings called a
hair follicle. Deeper inside the pore, near the base of the
follicle, there are sebaceous glands that produce sebum, a
natural type of oil. That oil helps keep the skin flexible and
protected.
Hair continues to grow through the surface, while oil or
sebum oozes out the side and is spread around the area. Skin
cells grow and die and are sloughed off through washing,
rubbing or spontaneously. But that process can be interrupted
when the pores close and when bacteria form inside them. The
result is acne.
The white pimples that sometimes form are usually a
combination of dead skin cells, white blood cells and bacteria.
The trapped pus often creates an inflamed, red area around it.
The term 'pus' is an adaptation of 'pustule', a type of acne
that results when the follicle wall bursts and the white blood
cells rush into the area as part of a healing process.
When the tiny bumps or spots appear black they're called
blackheads, naturally enough. They're a non-inflamed form of
acne that come from the material having poked through the
surface. Their dark color isn't the result of contact with dirt
on the skin. It's a combination of dead skin cells and sebum
that have oxidized. Oxygen in the air causes a chemical
reaction that turns them black.
Often, however, the material doesn't break the skin, but
simply pushes it up, forming a small, white bump called
whiteheads. One form are known as 'milia'. Normally dead skin
cells will get washed off or simply fall off the surface. But
they can get trapped underneath the surface. This type of acne
is common among infants, but can affect people at any age.
All these variations go by a general medical term called
'comedones', and whether that formation is open or closed is
part of the clinical difference between them.
As the acne develops it can variously form what are called
papules, nodules or cysts. A papule forms when the walls
holding the hair follicle burst near the surface. They're small
and don't contain pus. A nodule is a hardened lump under the
skin, resulting from a break at the base of the follicle. A
cyst is a larger, reddened bump. They're soft, but can be very
painful.
Naturally, while it's helpful to know what acne is, the most
important thing is to be able to treat it. In order to do that,
it's necessary to know what type we have.
You can find a lot more information on acne types and
treatments in this Acne section of this web
site.
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