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Most acne treatments work by drying out skin — with the logic that eliminating sebum eliminates acne. The usual result: dry, irritated skin and paradoxically more compensatory sebum production. Modern dermatology's approach is different: treat inflammation and the microbiome, not just sebum.
Acne Pathogenesis: Why Understanding It Matters
Acne isn't just excess sebum. It's inflammation of the hair follicle with four simultaneous factors:
- Sebum overproduction — from androgens, stress, diet
- Follicular hyperkeratinisation — dead cell accumulation blocking the follicle
- Colonisation by C. acnes (formerly P. acnes) — opportunistic bacteria that multiply in anaerobic sebum
- Inflammatory response — cytokine production causing redness and pustulation
A treatment that only attacks sebum without addressing the other three factors is incomplete.
The Spot Treatment Serum acts on the active blemish — not the whole face. For the rest of the face, the Prebiotic Serum rebalances the microbiome that feeds acne.
Spot Treatment Serum →Actives With Evidence for Mild to Moderate Acne
- Salicylic acid (BHA) — lipid-soluble, penetrates the pore, dissolves the sebaceous plug, reduces comedones
- Niacinamide at 4–5% — anti-inflammatory, reduces sebum, mildly antibacterial
- Prebiotics — rebalance the skin microbiome that favours C. acnes in imbalance
- Azelaic acid — antibacterial + anti-inflammatory + depigmenting for post-acne marks
What Worsens Acne and Appears to Improve It
High-concentration alcohol visibly dries active blemishes — creating the illusion of improvement. In reality, it dehydrates the barrier, increases compensatory oiliness and worsens the cycle.
For the marks that remain after acne, the Brightening Serum with alpha-arbutin reduces post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation while skin finishes healing.
Brightening Serum →