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Getting acne....Q&A............(part 3 of 5)

I’ve started getting acne spots. How long do they last? This depends on what type of spots they are and, even then, it can be very difficult to predict what will happen. Some spots will appear and then disappear during the course of a day but others will evolve more gradually through the various stages. Comedones can be very persistent if they don’t get inflamed. Mildly inflamed spots will last 5–10 days before settling down, but can leave a flat red mark (macule) for several weeks. Nodules and cysts may last for weeks or months unless you get some treatment. What is the difference between a whitehead and a yellow- head spot? These two common terms describe quite different types of spot. A whitehead is a closed comedone where the pore is blocked and not open to the air. There is no inflammation (redness). A yellow- head suggests a spot with pus in it. The medical term is a ‘pustule’. Whiteheads may become yellowheads if the blocked pore becomes infected. My daughter is only 9 but she seems

The skinny on skin

Here are some skin facts you can use to impress your friends and family:
 Skin is your heaviest organ. It accounts for about 15 percent of your body weight.
That means that the skin of a 400-pound sumo wrestler can weigh in at as much
as 60 pounds! The skin of an average adult woman weighs about 20 pounds.
 The thickness of the average epidermis varies from 0.5 millimeters on your eyelids
to 4.0 millimeters or more on the palms of your hands and the soles of your feet.
 You produce a totally new epidermis about every 30 days!
 Most of the dust in your classroom or bedroom is made of tiny fragments of
human skin. In just one minute, 30,000 to 40,000 skin cells fall unseen from the
surface of your body. That means you lose around 15 million or so skin cells in
one year. (Imagine how dusty it must be in that sumo wrestler’s bedroom!)
 Your dermis is several times thicker than the epidermis and is particularly thick
on the upper back. Our thick upper back may have protected us from saber-
toothed tigers when we walked on all fours. On second thought, I doubt it.
 “Goosebumps” come from tiny muscles called erector pili. These muscles
attach to each of our hairs and make them stand at attention when we’re cold
or afraid. We can see this phenomenon on a frightened cat whose fur stands on
end. It’s meant to make kitty look bigger and scarier to other animals. And when
we had more body hair during the Stone Age, it probably did the same for us.
 You have about 3 to 5 million hairs on your body.
 Your nails grow faster in warmer weather. They grow at a rate of 0.5 to 1.2 mil-
limeters per day, with fingernails growing faster than toenails.

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