Acne is a disease of young people, with a high incidence between the ages of 11 and 30. Eating spicy food, staying up late, drinking little water and having dry stools are the triggering factors. Sometimes you can see acne worsen during exams, or eat spicy food and break out the next day.
The pimples can get up quickly, but they don’t go down as quickly. You can see many young men and women with acne growing on the junction of the cheek and neck, sometimes with heavier cysts. In fact, acne occurs in any area where the sebaceous glands are overproductive, and the neck and cheeks are also good areas. Some young people who wash their faces neglect to clean their necks and the secretion of oil may cause the follicle openings in these areas to be clogged and prone to acne.
So you can use a mild cleanser to remove oil from the face and neck. Apply adapalene cream once at night and you can use an antibiotic cream, such as fusidic acid or clindamycin gel once during the day. Combine with blue light irradiation, photodynamic therapy, and dye laser treatment. Minocycline hydrochloride can be taken orally at 100mg per day for 4-6 weeks when there are more pus heads. Try to avoid the above four triggering factors in life, especially young people, do not stay up late and eat spicy food.