Well, the risk is also influential tablets on the people beside the frequency exposed to cigarette smoke.!
Smoking also causes skin aging
Smoking causes acne. But in addition, smoking can also make the skin look older, which is characterized by wrinkled skin and fine lines around the eyes. Because cigarette smoke that concerns the face and toxins of cigarettes left in the body together can create free radicals, damage the production of collagen, and damage skin protein at any age. One way to prevent premature aging is to stop or avoid tobacco smoke.
Smokers will experience acne scar tissue that worsens
Not only that, acne can also aggravate acne scars. This is evidenced by a study that looked at 992 people with severe acne treated at hospital dermatology clinics for 8 years. Nearly 91 percent of patients have severe scarring pimples on the face, compared with those who do not smoke. The study was presented at the annual conference of the British Association of Dermatologists, in Manchester.
At first, acne leaves marks on the face, then can make the skin hollow until the skin surface is not evenly distributed. The formation of scar tissue can also occur due to the habit of squeezing pimples.
Doctor Raman Bhutani, a member of the research team from the Harrogate District Trust Foundation, said the study proves that smoking can aggravate scarring in people prone to breakouts. However, further research is needed to explain how cigarette work worsens scarring
Smoking also causes skin aging
Smoking causes acne. But in addition, smoking can also make the skin look older, which is characterized by wrinkled skin and fine lines around the eyes. Because cigarette smoke that concerns the face and toxins of cigarettes left in the body together can create free radicals, damage the production of collagen, and damage skin protein at any age. One way to prevent premature aging is to stop or avoid tobacco smoke.
Smokers will experience acne scar tissue that worsens
Not only that, acne can also aggravate acne scars. This is evidenced by a study that looked at 992 people with severe acne treated at hospital dermatology clinics for 8 years. Nearly 91 percent of patients have severe scarring pimples on the face, compared with those who do not smoke. The study was presented at the annual conference of the British Association of Dermatologists, in Manchester.
At first, acne leaves marks on the face, then can make the skin hollow until the skin surface is not evenly distributed. The formation of scar tissue can also occur due to the habit of squeezing pimples.
Doctor Raman Bhutani, a member of the research team from the Harrogate District Trust Foundation, said the study proves that smoking can aggravate scarring in people prone to breakouts. However, further research is needed to explain how cigarette work worsens scarring