If permanent acne scarring has already occurred, your dermatologist can perform a number of cosmetic procedures to improve your appearance. For example, injections of collagen may be used to plump up depressed pockmark scars. Dermabrasion to "sand" scars down and make them less noticeable, can also be performed.

Benzoyl Peroxides

Prescription benzoyl peroxide preparations are invariably gel formulations rather than creams or lotions. Gels may be water-based, alcohol-based, or acetonebased. Alcohol-based gels are usually the most drying and water-based the least. Your dermatologist will be able to choose the best preparation for your individual needs. Some of the more commonly prescribed products are: Benzagel-5, Benzagel-10, Panoxyl 5 gel and Panoxyl 10 gel (alcohol-based); Persagel 5 gel and Persagel 10 gel (acetone-based); and Panoxyl Aq 21/2 gel, Panoxyl Aq 5 gel, and Panoxyl Aq 10 gel (water-based). As mentioned earlier, it is best to start on a 21/2 percent water-based benzoyl peroxide gel because these are generally the least irritating.



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Acne Medicines
Although it is true that no cure has as yet been discovered for acne, you no longer need to live with pimples. You don't have to manage as best as you can until you outgrow the problem. During the past ten to fifteen years, active research into the causes and control of acne has led to the development of a wide variety of effective oral and topical prescription drugs. These include a wide variety of benzoyl peroxide gels, RetinA, topical and oral antibiotics, and Accutane . Even if you have an inherited tendency to have acne breakouts, these newer remedies can do much to make you look and feel as though you don't.

Several years ago, a study was performed to determine some of the more common misconceptions that patients have about acne and its treatments. Interestingly, nearly 40 percent of those studied had the unrealistic expectation that their acne would magically disappear within at most a month after medical therapy was begun. Unhappily, this is not yet the case. In fact, most topical medications that are prescribed by dermatologists do not even begin to work until about one week after they are started; furthermore, their maximal effects are not usually seen until about three to four weeks following the start of therapy. Contrary to popular belief, oral medications usually do not begin to work until about two to three weeks following the beginning of therapy, and their maximal effects may not be seen until six to eight weeks have elapsed. To be realistic, and to prevent yourself from experiencing need less upset and frustration, do not expect to see satisfactory improvement in your condition until between two and three months after you start proper medical therapy.