How to Get Rid of Acne Pimples and Other Skin Problems
"Patients are deluded into thinking that their health can somehow be mysteriously harmed by something in their diet."
This is a quote from an article published in 1971 in American Family Physician.
That's not all.
The major textbook of dermatology for acne published in 1975 claimed that parents and doctors used the threat of depriving teens of "tempting delights" like candy and junk food only as a way to "keep these imminent sinners in check," not because diet had any connection to acne.
In fact, most of us tend to believe that pimples are for kids!Not true.
The average age of acne patients has now increased from 20 to 26 years old.
Millions of adults are experiencing acne for the first time.
And acne rates are rising -- contradicting the belief that this condition is caused by genes.
Eight million people see the dermatologist every year for acne and millions more rely on infomercial products hawked by celebrities or over-the-counter products that total $100 million in sales every year.And healthcare costs for prescription acne treatment exceed $1 billion a year.
Clearly, this problem, like so many chronic diseases in the 21st century, is increasing.
Why?
Let me tell you about a book that I just finished reading.
It's called The Clear Skin Diet. It's written by renowned dermatologist Val Trelor, MD and Alan Logan, ND, a naturopath.
This book gives us real answers to why pimples are popping up all over!
For the first time, this book links many of the imbalances in the underlying keys to health (The 7 Keys of UltraWellness) to the real causes of acne -- including your nutritional status, stress, toxicity, inflammation, and hormonal and gut imbalances.
If you've been reading my blogs, you know by now what I'm going to say next.
No matter what condition, disease, or health problem you face, the root causes can be traced back to the same underlying factors, because the body is one whole integrated system.
This includes your skin.
The key to healthy skin isn't just dealing with the symptoms -- like lathering on potions and lotions, popping and pricking pimples, or taking antibiotics or strong liver-damaging medication.
There's a better way.
Good Skin Comes from the Inside Out, Not the Outside In!
Before I explain these connections in more detail, and what you can do about it, I want to tell you my own experience with acne.I never had it.
That is, until I got sick with chronic fatigue syndrome.
This is a disease of toxicity, gut damage, inflammation, hormonal imbalances and stress, among other things.
I have told the story of my illness and recovery many times, but I don't usually talk about the skin problems I had.
The trigger that tipped me over the edge -- on a load of mercury and stress -- was a severe intestinal infection.
Right away, my skin changed.
My skin color turned gray and I developed dark circles under my eyes.
I started getting pimples all over my face (a new adventure for me at age 36), and strange rashes around my eyes whenever I ate certain foods.
I even developed itchy red patches on different parts of my body.
The skin symptoms completely correlated with a worsening of my gut symptoms and the irritable bowel syndrome that I had developed.
So what did I do?
Well, I didn't need creams, gels, or lotions such as benzoyl peroxide, retinoid acid, salicylic acid, glycolic acid peels, or topical antibiotics (all of which might help symptoms a little bit).
I certainly didn't need oral antibiotics (which can cause long-term gut complications, immune problems, and yeast overgrowth) or Accutane (which can cause liver damage and increase the risk of depression and suicide), or oral contraceptives (which I would have been offered had I been a woman).
These are the tools of modern dermatology -- but they overlook the role of overall health in the health of your skin.
I didn't need any of these things.
Instead, what I needed was to heal my leaky gut, correct my food allergies and nutritional deficiencies, detoxify from mercury, reduce inflammation, and rebalance my stress hormones.
That's just what I did.
And my pimples vanished, my eyes cleared up, and my rashes went away (along with my chronic diarrhea, disabling fatigue, brain fog, mouth sores, muscle pain, and more).
A miracle? Hardly!
I have seen this happen in so many of my patients.
Beauty and vibrant, clear, healthy skin come from the inside out, not from the outside in.
The only partial exceptions to this are wrinkles and skin cancers, which come from sun damage. But even these, too, are worsened by internal inflammation and oxidative stress caused by things like smoking and poor diet.
Now let's look a little at the problem of acne (many other skin problems also respond to this approach, which I will cover in later blogs).
Here are some things that I have learned over the years and that have been very well reviewed and summarized in The Clear Skin Diet.
A Poor Diet is Bad for Your Skin
- · Skin health, and acne in particular, are tied strongly to diet.
- · Acne is caused by inflammation and oxidative stress (two keys of UltraWellness).
- · Traditional indigenous cultures have little acne, but as soon as they adopt a Western diet or SAD (standard American diet), they see increasing levels of acne.
- · Sugar raises insulin levels, which promotes the production of testosterone in women, and inflammation in general, causing acne.
- · Saturated and processed fats increase arachidonic acid levels and compete with omega-3 fats in the body, leading to more inflammation and acne
- · Milk and dairy consumption is closely linked with acne (and many other skin and health problems) in part because of the hormones (including growth hormone) in dairy and because of the saturated fats.
- · High-sugar milk chocolate can increase acne by increasing inflammation, but dark chocolate does the opposite.
Nutritional Deficiencies Promote Acne
- · Widespread nutritional deficiencies of zinc, omega-3 fats, and some anti-inflammatory omega-6 fats like evening-primrose oil promote acne, while supplementing with them can help boost immunity and reduce inflammation and acne.
- · A topical form of vitamin B3 (nicotinamide) can reduce inflammation and help acne.
- · Antioxidant levels are low in acne patients -- especially vitamins A and E, which are critical for skin health.
- · People who eat more fruits and vegetables (containing more antioxidants and anti-inflammatory compounds) have less acne.
- · Certain foods have been linked to improvements in many of the underlying causes of acne and can help correct it, including fish oil, turmeric, ginger, green tea, nuts, dark purple and red foods such as berries, green foods like dark green leafy vegetables, and eggs.
Hormonal Imbalances Cause Skin Problems
- · Hormonal imbalances trigger acne -- and diet influences hormones like testosterone, IGF-1 (insulin-like growth hormone), and insulin, which promote acne.
- · The biggest factor affecting your hormones is the glycemic load of your diet (how quickly the food increases your blood sugar and insulin levels).
- · Eating omega-3 fats and fiber (to reduce testosterone in women), cutting out sugar (to reduce insulin), and using soy foods (to reduce toxic testosterone levels) help balance hormones. Exercise also helps improve insulin function.
Leaky Gut and Food Allergies Cause Acne
- · Delayed food allergies are among the most common causes of acne. Foods like gluten, dairy, yeast, and eggs can be problems if you have a leaky gut.
- · Taking probiotics (such as lactobacillus) can improve acne.
- · Good bacteria from probiotics also take up residence on the skin, helping with acne.
- · I have seen serious cystic acne resulting from gut imbalances and parasites that resolve when the gut is fixed.
Your Brain Can Cause Acne
- · Stress causes acne flare-ups.
- · Stress does this by causing increased inflammation and oxidative stress, raising cortisol, and depleting zinc, magnesium, and selenium, which help control acne.
- · Stress causes poor dietary choices.
- · You can manage stress through meditation, yoga, saunas, massage, biofeedback, aromatherapy, and more.
So getting healthy skin and clearing up acne truly depend on the optimal function of many of the core systems of the body -- your nutritional status, your immune system, your gut, your hormones and your mind-body health.
I may seem like a broken record, but it's true -- Biology is biology.
I hope you've learned more today about how getting to the roots of illness via the 7 Keys to UltraWellness can help you uncover the source of your health problem, wherever you may find it -- even in a pimple on your nose!!
Now I'd like to hear from you...
Do you suffer from acne?
Have you noticed if your skin looks better or worse when you eat certain foods?
What steps have you taken to keep your skin healthy?
Please let me know your thoughts by adding a comment below.
Mark Hyman, M.D. practicing physician and founder of The UltraWellness Center is the author of The UltraMind Solution. Dr. Hyman is now sharing the 7 ways to tap into your body’s natural ability to heal itself. You can follow him on Twitter, connect with him on LinkedIn, watch his videos on Youtube and become a fan on Facebook.

Comments
Hopeful
I was put on bioidentical progesterone and natural cortisol when I started going to this health and wellness center. A month or so later my face, neck, chest, belly, and back started to flare up with serious acne that hurts. I can't say I had perfect skin; I always have a couple pimples here and there on my face, and especially during my monthly cycle but never that bad. The physician didn't understand why that had happened and said that it's just me. He didn't even bother reaching out to me and try to figure things out. He'd even offer to put me on birth control and that's out of their line of practice there. I was a mess! My confidence, self-esteem, and quality of life went down the drain. I became homebound and didn't want to go out much at all. I'd hide from people, even the UPS guy who came to deliver my package. I can't recall how many nights I've cried myselft to sleep. I was 29. I went through three different doctors and a nurse practioner there in that same clinic and four years later I am still struggling with this problem, and more. I forgot to mention that my hair was falling out and still is, and I was also put on armour thyroid for hypothyroidism. Through the years as they were trying to help fix my skin problem, which they had given to me, with different hormones and supplements; I ended up with more daunting problems like excessive underarms sweating with odor and dry hands. And they couldn't even fix that! I have more problems now than before I started going there. I have a few amalgams fillings in my mouth, and I have done three colon detoxes with heavy metal cleanse. I don't know why each time toward the end of the metal cleanse my skin started to break out more on my face and body. Lately I have been having more pain in my colon and pelvis with vaginal discharge. I had occult blood 16 years ago when I had really bad constipation, and started having pain on my left side by the waistline. Lately the pain has been progressing towards center left abdominal. I believe my kidneys are still hurting too--on and off. I had a kidney ultrasound and bloodwork done several months ago and they were ok. I had a saliva hormone test done a couple months plus ago with really low progesterone and high testosterone, also low estrogens but wasn't tested for estriol level. I was put on saw palmetto 2xs a day and zinc once a day to see if there is any change in my skin, sweating/odor, dry skin, and thinning hair. And the result..........nothing! I'm still a mess. They are out of ideas and want me to stop everything except the armour thyroid to "reset" my body. They have suggested that I go see a toxicologist and also get a scalp biopsy for my hair shedding problem. My hair shedding problem actually got back to normal 11 months after I had my son 3 years ago. One day I was feeling a little warm than usual and so I called my nurse and she, without authorization, put me on T-3, and a few days later my hair started shedding all over--again. When I told my doctor at the time he was shocked and repeated several times saying "she put you on T-3?" He never said anything after that. I think she made a hugh oopsy at my expense and I never go a straight answer why she had put me on T-3 and if that was the reason why my hair started falling out all over again. Then I sought help with a nurse practioner, at this time coincidently the male doctors aren't helping me in any department and not at all sensitive about my skin problem either. She put me on renewal cream that also contains some estriol and progesterone to help with the blemishes and dark spots from the acne along with DIM and something amazing happened. About three weeks later my hair stop falling out and my skin was clearing up fast, half way, but not completely because I had to stop what I was taking because I believe my kidneys were hurting when I breathed hard, in or out (when I had my kidney blookdwork and ultrasound done), and also I started to have this underarm sweating and odor out of nowhere. I stopped everything, and everything just stood still there and then. She discussed my problems with other doctors and they still can't put the pieces of the puzzle together so they want me to see a toxicologist and get scalp biopsy. And also to stop everything except the armour thyroid so my body can "reset". Can I "reset" the hormones in my body that are going haywire by doing nothing and let them go haywire? Or is that's just a nice way of telling me to go somewhere else for help and that they are tired of dealing with me. That's what I think and that's what I feel. I feel angry, abandonned, neglected, stressed, resented, unattractive, pathetic, helpless, frustrated, and I can go on. I'm sick and tire of being sick. That's what they are there for, to help people get their lives back, so they said, and I got the opposite. Thanks.
Anonymous
I have gone thru similiar problems, have just about givin up on doctors. The best thing I have come up with on my own is supplements, digestive enzimes, and probotics. Stay as far away from sugar as possible seems to help.
uk person
Hi All,
In year 2000 I had some vaccinations before going to live abroad, I was 23. Within two days, my perfect skin was a mass of spots, some small, some large but all of them messy and ugly. It still is at times, today.
Since 2000, I have been on Dianette, Oxytertacyclene, Benzol Peroxide, I've used N-Lite lasers, Vitamin C peels, Phytic peels, Microdermabrasion, dietary changes (perricone diet), yoga, swimming, de-stressing, you could probably name it and I've tried it to try and get rid of this acne.
My most recent plan is to start on Chlorella and Vitamin C in the hope of completely getting rid of the poisons in my system. I do feel bitter that the doctor gave me so many vaccinations, I feel bitter that I trusted someone in authority to do the right thing, but the thing is- when it comes to your health- YOU are the only person that can make the difference , it's up to you to go out and find a cure, doctors won't help you, they don't have the knowledge, you need to become your own doctor.
Of course I wish I knew then what I know now, but that's life, I won't give up on trying to clear my skin. As for parents letting their children have vaccinations- don't- it's not worth the risk- why let the pharmaceutical industry get more money for endangering the health of your child, it's all about money and we are still guinea- pigs for them. Anyway- I sound mad- so I shall leave you to enjoy your day, bye x
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