Acne
What is acne?
Acne occurs when the oil glands of your skin become plugged. More
than 90% of teenagers have some acne. With acne you will have
blackheads, whiteheads (pimples), or red bumps on your face, neck,
and shoulders.
How can I take care of myself?
- Basic treatment for all acne.
- Wash your skin twice a day and after exercise. Use a mild
soap.
- Shampoo your hair daily. Keep your hair off your face so
that it does not rub against your skin.
- Avoid picking and squeezing. Picking keeps acne from
healing. Squeezing causes bleeding into the skin and
blotches that last a month.
- Treatment for pimples (infected oil glands) or blackheads (the
plugs found in blocked-off oil glands).
- Benzoyl peroxide 5% lotion or gel: This lotion helps to
open pimples and unplug blackheads. It also kills
bacteria. Apply the lotion once a day at bedtime. Redheads
and blonds should apply it every other day for the first 2
weeks. (Caution: benzoyl peroxide can bleach clothing and
bedding, so apply it sparingly.)
- Pimple opening the safe way: Never open a pimple before it
has come to a head (has a yellow center). Wash your face
and hands first. Use a needle that has been sterilized
with rubbing alcohol. Nick the surface of the yellow
pimple with the tip of the needle. The pus should run out
without squeezing. Wipe away the pus and wash the area
with soap and water. Don't "pop" pimples by squeezing.
- Treatment for red bumps.
Large red bumps mean the infection has spread beyond the oil
gland. If you have several red bumps, you probably also need
an antibiotic. Antibiotics come as solutions for the skin or
as pills.
Your antibiotic is __________________________. Use it ______
times a day every day.
Call your doctor during office hours if:
- The acne has not improved after you have treated it with
benzoyl peroxide for 2 months.
- It looks infected (large, red, tender bumps).
- You have other concerns or questions.
Written by B.D. Schmitt, MD, author of "Your Child's Health," Bantam Books.
Published by
RelayHealth.
Last modified: 2007-04-19
Last reviewed: 2008-06-09
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
© 2008 RelayHealth and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.