Why Do Teens Get Pimples?

Written by beacnefree on July 24th, 2008

Most teens will experience acne at one time or another. In fact, about 8 out of 10 teenagers will get acne outbreaks. The common age that acne begins to occur is at thirteen years of age.

Every year, millions of teenagers will be getting acne and trying to fight it. Acne has been a sore spot for teenagers since the beginning of time.

Acne is a very common condition for teenagers to have. Still, it can be a real struggle trying to get rid of it. In fact, many will only be fighting an ongoing battle and here is why.

The pores in your skin have oil glands. These oil glands make “sebum”, an oil that is a natural lubricant for your skin and hair. When a teenager’s body starts to mature, a hormone imbalance starts taking place. The teen’s hormones begin stimulating the oil glands to produce more sebum, and then the oil glands become overactive.

When these oil glands are overactive, pores will become clogged from dead skin cells and bacteria, which the body naturally tries to eliminate through these glands. When everything becomes trapped like this, then the pores will get red and swell up from being infected. These are pimples.

Some areas of the body are more prone to getting acne outbreaks. The face, back, shoulder, neck and chest areas are the most common areas of the body, for acne to thrive.

The most common variety of pimples that teens get are referred to as “whiteheads” and “blackheads”. The whitehead variety of pimples push out against the infected pore with puss, causing it to look white. The blackhead is a pimple that is pushing the clogged dead skin cells and bacteria inward. This causes the pimples to look smaller and darker at the center of the pimple.

The whitehead variety of acne is by far the most common. They itch and hurt. It is important not to squeeze these pimples, trying to pop them. The urge to do this is strong, yet it is the wrong thing to do.

Squeezing these pimples, can actually cause the pimple to become more infected and also spread the bacteria, infecting other skin pores.

As much as you might feel that you have no control over the acne, you actually have more control over the outbreaks than you might think. Sometimes what your body needs, is the right balance and proper skin care.
Try taking multi-vitamins. Your acne could be caused by not getting the proper nutrients for your skin. Skin is the largest organ of the human body. When the body is not being provided the right nutrients, one of the ways the body reacts to this is by producing more sebum.
If you want to properly cure your acne you should consider investing in an acne treatment system. As we’ve explained in this article acne isn’t just a surface problem. That means that treating it with your everyday acne face wash that you buy at the local store isn’t actually going to solve the problem.

We have reviewed many different acne products and come up with a list of what we believe are the top acne treatment systems available today. These reviews are designed to cut down the amount of time it takes to find the right acne product for your personal needs. Take a few minutes to check out our reviews and then make a decision on which of those products will work best for you.

Once you have your acne treatment system use the soap it comes with, warm water, and a clean cotton wash rag to clean your acne infected area. Clean it gently, without scrubbing hard, as this will only irritate the skin more.

Harsh scrubbing will also stimulate your oil glands to begin over-producing sebum. Clean your area two, to three times a day like this. Always use a fresh clean wash cloth for this ritual.

If your system comes with any other steps (such as a supplement pill or face lotion) make sure to keep up with them as instructed by the manufacturers.

This alone, will help to keep your acne from spreading and also help speed up the healing process. Even after the physical signs of the acne have disappeared, stay with your system. This helps keep the oil glands clean from dead skin and bacteria, waiting to breakout into acne.

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