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It's a fact stress makes teens spotty!

Published on March 8, 2007 at 6:20 AM · No Comments

A large study had found that stress exacerbates teenage acne.

Researcher Dr. Gil Yosipovitch, a professor of dermatology at Wake Forest University School of Medicine, along with researchers in Singapore conducted a study with 94 high school students in Singapore.

Singapore has a stable climate where weather factors remain constant and they set up a test to see if stress is a contributing factor in teenage acne.

The students had an average age of just under 15 and were undergoing an annual exam that determines who will go on to university and who will follow some other pathway.

The study looked at whether levels of sebum, the oily substance that coats the skin and protects the hair, increase in times of stress and are related to acne severity.

Acne is an inflammatory disease of the skin caused by changes in the hair follicle and the sebaceous glands of the skin that produce sebum.

The oily substance plugs the pores, resulting in whiteheads or blackheads (acne comedonica) and pimples (acne papulopustulosa).

The researchers suspected that stress increases the quantity of sebum, which leads to increased acne severity, however, the results showed that sebum production didn't differ significantly between the high-stress and low-stress conditions.

The students were asked to complete a questionnaire widely used in stress research, once just before mid-year exams and again during the summer break; dermatologists assessed whether the students' acne worsened.

The researchers found that teens who claim that stress makes them break out in spots have a point and are telling the truth as the stress of taking an exam can make pimples worse.

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