There are about 50 million people in the country who hide their faces (like Michael Jackson says he did as a teenager), or stare at the ground when in company because their acne drives them to distraction and personal embarrassment. So you shouldn't be surprised to find any number of people among your crowd bringing up for conversation any of a bunch of expensive new aesthetic devices on the market these days, that promise to help a stubborn acne situation. Some of them promise that bursts of sound waves can do the job, while for others, nothing would do other than colored light acne treatment. And they don't just stop at acne either. Apparently, they will help plump up your skin without collagen injections, will take away unwanted hair, and if you would believe them, perhaps transport you back ten years in the past. So, do these things even begin to go halfway to living up to their claims?
Acne is considered a cosmetic problem; and that is where the trouble begins. It actually is a very painful condition that can put suppurating blains and blisters on your face that can scar you and leave you with long months of pain when you get flareups. The best and most effective drug used to cure acne is the same Accutane prescription medicine that is used in brain cancer. People who do take this, accept the risks of birth defects in the children they have, and painfully inflamed digestive tracts. That is how serious the acne condition can be to treat (though milder cases can actually yield to simple Clearasil and Neutrogena ministrations). Can the precious little fashionable battery-powered devices that promise light acne treatment really do anything?
If you would believe the manufacturers of the devices, they really should work, since they are just consumer versions of the devices we would find in any dermatologist clinic. But it just so happens that the science that these depend on, is quite ill-proven even if the Food and Drug Administration has okayed them. Dermatologists are still just about equally divided on the issue. Acne is caused by outbreaks of bacterial infection caused by the propionibacterium. Light acne treatment that uses blue and red light colors, one that is effective, is said to cure outbreaks by about two-thirds. But even the most avid proponents only say that you could use these as an added measure over what the dermatologist does for you.
So why do these actually work? The popular devices the No!No! Skin and the Claro claim that their colored lights kill bacteria and help the skin get on with the task of self-healing. The light is supposed to penetrate the skin, and kill the bacteria. But the kind of devices you see at the doctors, are easily 100 times as powerful as the devices you could get over the counter. And those powerful professional devices aren't half as effective as these home devices claim they are. As with any such claim, these devices deal with half-truths. The science behind them, that lights colored green, blue and red can penetrate skin and make things very uncomfortable for bacteria, is indeed a meaningful one. The devil is often in the details. The details of how to actually make it work for you in a real world situation.
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