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   Table of Contents
  • What Is Acne?
  • How Does Acne Develop?
  • What Causes Acne?
  • Who Gets Acne?
  • Methods of Acne Treatment
  • Blackheads, Whiteheads, and Mild
         Inflammatory Acne Treatment

  • Moderate to Severe Inflammatory Acne Treatment
  • Severe Nodular or Cystic Acne Treatment
  • Hormonally Influenced Acne Treatment in Women
  • Other Acne Treatments
  • Skin Care and Acne Treatment
  • What Research Is Being Done on Acne?
  • Keeping on top of Your Condition
  •      

    Acne Development and Causes



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    Doctors describe acne as a disease of the pilosebaceous units (PSUs). Found over most of the body, PSUs consist of a sebaceous gland connected to a canal, called a follicle, that contains a fine hair (see "Normal Pilosebaceous Unit" diagram, below). These units are most numerous on the face, upper back, and chest. The sebaceous glands make an oily substance called sebum that normally empties onto the skin surface through the opening of the follicle, commonly called a pore. Cells called keratinocytes line the follicle.



    Normal Pilosebaceous Unit
    Diagram of a narmal pilosebaceous unit, showing location of: Hair, Skin surface, sebum, follicle, and sebaceous gland.

    The hair, sebum, and keratinocytes that fill the narrow follicle may produce a plug, which is an early sign of acne. The plug prevents sebum from reaching the surface of the skin through a pore. The mixture of oil and cells allows bacteria Propionibacterium acnes (P. acnes) that normally live on the skin to grow in the plugged follicles. These bacteria produce chemicals and enzymes and attract white blood cells that cause inflammation. (Inflammation is a characteristic reaction of tissues to disease or injury and is marked by four signs: swelling, redness, heat, and pain.) When the wall of the plugged follicle breaks down, it spills everything into the nearby skin--sebum, shed skin cells, and bacteria--leading to lesions or pimples.

    People with acne frequently have a variety of lesions, some of which are shown in the diagrams below. The basic acne lesion, called the comedo (KOM-e-do), is simply an enlarged and plugged hair follicle. If the plugged follicle, or comedo, stays beneath the skin, it is called a closed comedo and produces a white bump called a whitehead. A comedo that reaches the surface of the skin and opens up is called a blackhead because it looks black on the skin's surface. This black discoloration is not due to dirt. Both whiteheads and blackheads may stay in the skin for a long time.

    Acne Pictures: Types of Lesions
    Illustration of lesion, Microcomedo
    Illustration of lesion, Open Comedo (Blackhead)
    Illustration of lesion, Closed Comedo (Whitehead)

    Other troublesome acne lesions can develop, including the following:

    • Papules--inflamed lesions that usually appear as small, pink bumps on the skin and can be tender to the touch
    • Pustules (pimples)--papules topped by pus-filled lesions that may be red at the base
    • Nodules--large, painful, solid lesions that are lodged deep within the skin
    • Cysts--deep, painful, pus-filled lesions that can cause scarring.



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