Monday, January 24, 2011

Tips for whiteheads


Tips for whiteheads

1. Drink lots of water and fresh juices.

2. Eat fresh fruits and vegetables.

3. First thing in the morning - Have a glass of warm water with the juice of lemon. It helps in detoxifying the body.

4. You should apply home scrubs made of fruit peels.

5. You should never try to remove the whiteheads forcefully.

6.

If your skin is a oily type or a combination type, do not apply a hydrating cream or a moisturizer.

7.

If you have tiny whiteheads do not disturb them – because they disappear by themselves in a few days.

8. Consult your dermatologist if the whiteheads persist for too long.

Friday, January 21, 2011

How to get rid of whiteheads

How to get rid of whiteheads


You must be patient to get rid of whiteheads.

Just like in the garden, you should wait until they are ripe and juicy before you harvest. If you attempt to pop them too soon, you will most likely smash the mix of bacteria, oil, puss, and dead skin down further into the pore, which can lead to infection and even scarring. Some say not to pop the whitehead – but you don’t see them walking around with a social stigma on their face. Popping is a safe way to get rid of whiteheads if you know what you are doing. Are you supposed to wait until it squirts onto your supper? I don’t think so.

If you’re going to get rid of a whitehead, you’ll need the tools of the trade.

Find a clean rag, a sewing needle, some sterile gauze or cotton swabs, some hot water, and a bottle of alcohol. An adhesive bandage may come in handy as well, especially if your whitehead looks big enough to win first prize at the state fair.

Now it’s time to wash your hands and face with hot water and mild, noncomedogenic soap.

It is important that your hands and the area around the whitehead are sterile so it won’t become infected. After you are clean, wet the rag in hot water (if it isn’t already) and gently press it against your whitehead for a few minutes. This will open up your pores and sometimes this is enough to get rid of the whitehead. If it breaks, gently wipe up the ooze and skip to the last step.

Sterilize your sewing needle with the alcohol and gently prick the whitehead with the tip.

If you want, whisper some trash talk as you do it. Once the whitehead is punctured, place a strip of gauze or a cotton swab on opposite sides of the whitehead. Slowly apply pressure until either clear liquid or blood comes out. Once that is done, you have rid yourself of the whitehead.

Lastly, soak a gauze pad in alcohol and gently wipe the area clean.

In this way, you will protect yourself against infection and scarring. If you want, now’s the time to apply an adhesive strip, but if your skin is easily agitated, I would just leave it and be mindful to watch for any more drainage, as the bacteria in the departed whitehead could spread to nearby pores.



Whitehead

Whiteheads


Whiteheads are composed of lipids/oils and sebum, that combine with cellular fragments. Because whiteheads tend to be more solid than liquid, they plug the hair follicles and grow in size, sometimes developing into painful acne cysts. Whiteheads are closed from the skin's surface by cellular debris at the follicle opening. Because they have no contact with oxygen, they do not oxidize or turn brown, as blackheads do. They form a light or yellow-white lump and are called milia (or milium, singular). Bacteria enters the follicles, leading to acne infections, especially cystic acne.

Difference between blackhead and whitehead


They both are clogged pores, however a blackhead known as an open comedone, takes on a darker color because the sebum and debris have oxidized. A whitehead, known as a closed comedone, has not reached the surface and has not oxidized (a reaction when a substance hits oxygen). There are also pustules where inflammation and pus (infection) are present. A papule is a red, inflamed bump with no noticable pus.



 
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