Posts Tagged ‘rosacea triggers’

Rosacea Triggers

November 12th, 2009

The term “rosacea triggers” describes anything that leads to the emergence of or to an increase of the symptoms of rosacea. This open definition takes in the wide variety of unique conditions that people experience that cause their rosacea symptoms to flare up.

While there is a large variety of rosacea triggers, it’s clear to see there is a common theme in many of the triggers: heat. This comes in many different forms, such as:

Sun Exposure. Heat from the sun is a huge trigger for many people, and obviously something that is hard to manage when you live in the real world. For this reason, it’s often suggested to wear sunscreen lotion (SP30+) along with a hat when outdoors.

Spicy Foods. This is a tough one, as the taste for spicy food does not concede to the logic that it acts as a rosacea trigger!

Hot Drinks. Hot drinks such as coffee or hot tea are common triggers.

Hot Water. Taking a shower with water that’s too hot is another common trigger. Additionally, and in the same aspect, heated pools and hot tubs are also included in this category.

Intense Exercise. This trigger is an interesting one. At first glance it’s puzzling but it makes sense. Performing intense cardiovascular exercise or lifting weights can heat up the body. This heat in turn then acts as a trigger.

Stress. Stress is an underrated rosacea trigger. It’s one of the most common triggers yet the hardest to treat, as it’s not simply a case of avoiding this or that, but rather, changing how a person interacts with their emotions and their environment. Second to sun exposure, this is the most common rosacea trigger.

Wind and Cold Weather. At the other side of sun exposure, being exposed to windy conditions or, separate from this or in combination to it, cold weather, functions as a trigger.

Alcoholic Beverages. Along with spicy foods, this is another tough one, as alcohol is another common trigger.

Misc Triggers: Many more than what’s above, including diverse things such as vegetables, dairy products, marinated meats, cosmetics, skin care products, medication, and even sex, which perhaps acts as a trigger in the same was exercise can act as a trigger.

Unmasking ones own triggers is a crucial part of taking responsibility over ones skin condition and overall health if you have rosacea. Many dermatologists recommend a simple method of having a notepad or journal handy for jotting down some basic details of when you have a rosacea flareup, noting what you were doing, describing the symptoms experience, a description of their intensity, and any relevant environmental conditions or situation details that may act to bring on your symptoms. Over time, and in combination with what is already known about rosacea triggers in general, this information can help detect simple patterns that reveal an individuals own rosacea triggers.

Is There a Rosacea Cure?

October 31st, 2009

Is there a cure for rosacea?

This is a good question, an understandable one, one in which the day will surely come when the answer is yes. Unfortunately, right now, the answer is no, there is not a cure for rosacea.

The good news is that there is legitimate research going on into finding a cure for rosacea. Many concede that one prominent problem in this area is a lack of our understanding as to what causes rosacea. When research into rosacea reveals a clear answer to the question of what causes rosacea, it provides a logical route towards finding a rosacea cure by simply determining how to remove, stop, or reverse those causes. But while we don’t understand the clear cause behind rosacea, determining what would cure this skin condition is a bumpy research project.

In place of  “the rosacea cure”, so to speak, the logical fill-in stands. This, of course, means the various treatments for rosacea that have developed and are currently in development. Most people who have to deal with rosacea come to a point in their lives where the treatments and lifestyle conditions they experience lead to a situation in which the symptoms of rosacea are nicely under control. These symptoms – facial flushing, redness of the face, bumps, and so on – may not disappear entirely. They may be be put under control in the sense of being minimized or not present most of the time.

It’s important to see additionally that it’s not just rosacea treatment that lead to keeping rosacea under control. It’s not simply taking prescription medicine for rosacea or over the counter rosacea treatments, or even high quality, expensive laser treatments. Obviously, these things are an integral part of the equation, but a person cannot discount the overall environment and lifestyle factors that play into the equation as well.

What does this mean? It’s about “triggers”, which is anything that leads to an increase or emergence of the symptoms of rosacea. These vary wildly, from stress factors to sun exposure to exercise to seemingly random things such as eating yogurt, or even, ironically, a reaction to certain treatment medication. All these things can be grouped together as seen as a sort of “lifestyle factor”. Keeping these lifestyle factors under control in such a way as to control the severity of rosacea is just as important as the medication and treatments for rosacea themselves.

These two factors – treatment and lifestyle – remain the only default “rosacea cure” that exists until research scientists uncover and test a real cure for rosacea.