Hormonal Acne
When pimples appear or increase on a woman's face as she approaches menstruation, she is suffering with 'hormonal' or 'premenstrual' acne. While some only get one or two pimples and don't find them much of a burden, other women's acne can be deep, painful, and widespread, covering their entire face, chest, and back. Besides the risk of permanent scarring from picking pimples, the emotional stress associated with their appearance tends to be the hardest on women. Being more than skin deep, pimples that fluctuate with the menstrual cycle signify an underlining hormonal imbalance and even problems related to a women's fertility.
Hormonal
acne is mostly due to the elevated androgen (male hormone),
testosterone, stimulating the sebaceous glands in the face to produce
more sebum (oil). This increases the possibility of glands becoming
plugged and inflamed, causing pimples to form. Since the majority of
the testosterone produced in a woman's body is from cells within her
ovaries, signs of excessive testosterone, like acne, can signify that
the ovaries are not working properly. One condition hormonal acne may
point to is polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS). Women are diagnosed
with PCOS when they have two out of three conditions: anovulation/
amenhorrhoea (lack of monthly ovulation or menstruation), elevated
androgens, or ovarian cysts visible via ultrasound.
Both diet
and lifestyle are linked to acne flare ups. Studies have shown that
acne sufferers improve when they eat foods that
are lower on the glycemic (sugar) index so that their digestion takes
longer to assimilate the sugar within them and thus keeps insulin
levels within a normal range. The reason for this is that excess
insulin inhibits testosterone regulation, leading to excessive
testosterone. In another study researchers who originally set out to
prove that acne was not aggravated by stress were surprised to find the
opposite. College students were monitored during exam time, an
undeniable stressful event, and their acne increased as they approached
exams. Hormonal imbalances triggered by the stress were postulated as
the main cause.
Chinese
medicine (CM) has diagnosed and treated pre-menstrual acne for
thousands of years. It has always seen issues such as eating an
improper diet of overly sweet and greasy foods and excessive emotional
and mental stress as some of the main causes of acne. CM believes that
these poor lifestyle habits block regular blood and energy flow,
particularly to the reproductive organs, creating stagnation.
Stagnation leads to heat (or inflammation), which rises in the body and
manifests as acne. When menstruation begins, this stagnated heat drains
out of the body through the menstrual blood and the acne improves.
Until the root cause of the stagnation is addressed, the hormonal acne
cycle will continue.
Chinese medical theory
says, "for acne in men treat the intestines, in women regulate the
menstrual cycle." Signs of stagnation related to the menstrual cycle
are short, delayed, or painful cycles and thick, clotted, or darker
coloured flow. To relieve stagnation, treatment includes lifestyle
counseling with an emphasis on stress reduction and dietary adjustment.
The recommendations are aimed at increasing vegetable intake and
limiting foods such as dairy, wheat flour products, concentrated
sugars, and deep fried or greasy foods. Herbal medicine and/ or
acupuncture is often necessary to resolve the deep stagnation and
inflammation it causes. A typical treatment for hormonal acne can be
anywhere from 12 to 20 weeks long. Since so much attention is paid to
regulating the menstrual cycle, acne treatments can also optimize a
woman's fertility. This is a welcome bonus to the relief a woman feels
with the improvement of her acne.
As a practitioner of Chinese
medicine, I have always enjoyed observing the regained confidence women
experience when they are relieved of the emotional stress associated
with acne. To me, mind and body are united and, as one heals so does
the other, revealing what is on the outside of the body is only a
reflection of the inside.
Trevor Erikson, R.TCMP