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Date Published: Jun 10, 2010 - 4:59 pm
Hello people I wanted to know if you guys think acne comes from
eating greasy food or skipping on washing your face or does it
comes from sweat, stress, or do you think some of the acne removing
products make it disapear and reapear to make you think its working
and keep buying their product

Date Published: Jun 10, 2010 - 4:07 pm
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Date Published: Jun 06, 2010 - 7:12 pm
After i get out the shower or finish washing my face i use rubbing
alchol as a barrier from dust germs or whatever that can attach to
my face when im outside it seems to work for me because whenever i
forget to put it on it feels greasy and uncomfortable then i start
to break out. I was using Pro active for awhile but i sort fell off
when i ran out i never went to get any more but it cleared up my
face a little bit and my face didnt feel greasy or irritated when i
forgot to put it on.

Date Published: Jun 02, 2010 - 5:24 pm

Date Published: Jun 02, 2010 - 5:22 pm
A settlement between Teva Pharmaceuticals (TEVA) and a Georgia
teenager rendered blind by the company’s acne drug indicates that
life for generic drug companies is about to get a whole lot harder
— they’ll actually have to start caring about safety.
The settlement came because Teva did what all generic drug
companies do: It copied the original drug, right down its patient
information label, but it didn’t test its product for safety and it
didn’t add new safety warnings once new evidence emerged. Recent
court rulings have not been kind to generic drug companies who
argued that under federal law that’s all they need to do: State
laws may be stricter, and companies have the same duties to warn
doctors and patients of newly emerging health risks that branded
drug companies do.
The bottom line: The days of generic drug companies printing money
by simply photocopying other companies’ drugs may be over. They’re
going to have to get into the postmarket safety surveillance
business, too.
There’s a caution here for consumers, too: While the government and
the media may be urging you to choose generic products in light of
the Tylenol recall, bear in mind that even though the generics are
supposed to be identical to the real thing, they’re actually not
tested for safety before they reach the pharmacy shelf. (The law
just assumes that because they’re identical, they’re safe.)
The case is a heartbreaker. Katelyn Weilbrenner of Moultrie, Ga.,
went to see her doctor about acne, and he prescribed minocycline,
an antibiotic based on Lederle Labs‘ Minocin brand. Pretty soon she
got severe headaches and, before she stopped taking the medicine,
she’d lost almost all her sight. Weilbrenner’s doctor testified in
a deposition that he had no idea the drug was associated with
blindness in teens, and that he would not have prescribed it had he
known that.
Teva did know of an association, Weilbrenner alleged, but didn’t do
anything about it:
Defendant has admitted it was aware of the reported association
between the use of minocycline and the potential development of
pseudotumor cerebri in adolescent patients well before the incident
leading to Ms. Weilbrenner’s permanent loss of vision.
Nevertheless, Defendant also admits it has never mailed any
information to any physicians in the United States informing them
of this association, nor advised them of the need to routinely
check patients for papilledema (i.e., swelling of the optic nerve,
a hallmark of PTC) while taking minocycline.
Moreover, Teva has not undertaken to provide such information to
physicians since this incident causing legal blindness to Ms.
Weilbrenner.
Teva argued that it copied the Lederle warnings as required by
law:
Federal regulations require that the product labeling for Teva’s
generic drug minocycline be identical in all material respects to
that of its reference-listed drug Minocin®, thus dictating the
precise warning language that had to accompany the product that Ms.
Weilbrenner allegedly ingested. Federal regulations prohibit Teva
from making any changes to the labeling that would cause it to
diverge from the FDA-approved Minocin® labeling, under threat of
removal of Teva’s product from the market.
But recent cases, including another Teva case from 2007 in a
Massachusetts state court (Kelly v. Teva), have found that generic
companies have the same duties as regular drug companies: They must
file label updates if new risk information emerges.
Of course, this may all change if the U.S. Supreme Court rules that
its earlier preemption ruling in Wyeth v. Levine (which found that
state drug laws are not preempted by the more minimal federal
standards) does not extend to generic companies.

Date Published: May 30, 2010 - 6:49 am
Feds probing homemade skin cream link to mercury
By MICHAEL FELBERBAUM (AP) – 1 day ago
RICHMOND, Va. — State and federal officials are investigating cases
of possible mercury exposure linked to a homemade cream from Mexico
that claims to lighten the skin, fade freckles and age spots, and
treat acne.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration was recently made aware of
the issue and is conducting investigations in several states, said
spokesman Ira Allen. He would not say which states are included in
the investigation.
"We're very interested in pursuing cases of products that harm
people, particularly with mercury, which is especially harmful to
children," Allen said. "Any time we get intelligence on something
like this, we act on it."
Virginia health officials are investigating 10 cases in the central
and northwestern parts of the state involving children and adults
who had elevated levels of mercury after using the cream over the
course of a few years.
Officials in Virginia found out about the cases while assisting
California health officials in a case involving a family who had
also used the cream, which was sold without ingredient labels at
locations in Mexico, said Department of Health public health
toxicologist Dwight Flammia. Tests show the cream has about 5
percent to 6 percent mercury.
Historically, mercury has been used in a number of medicinal
products including skin-lightening creams, but has been banned from
almost all regulated and over the-counter medications in the U.S.
because it's toxic.
"People using homemade-type skin lightening creams has been going
on for decades," said Rebecca LePrell, an environmental
epidemiologist with the Virginia health agency. "Right here we're
just kind of capturing the tip of the iceberg."
The federal agency had issued import alerts in the mid-1990s
regarding the cosmetic products from Mexico and the Dominican
Republic, which bars the import of the products and prompts
authorities to seize products sent through U.S. ports of entry,
Allen said.
"It's impossible to find everything, but this stuff is dangerous,"
Allen said, urging people to contact health officials if they have
used or purchased such products.
Unregulated products may contain mercury that can be absorbed
through the skin. Elevated levels of mercury in the body can affect
the nervous system and kidneys. Symptoms of mercury poisoning
include irritability, tremors, memory loss, personality change, gum
inflammation and upset stomach. None of the Virginia cases showed
any symptoms, Flammia said.
The investigation was first prompted by nutritional tests in
California done by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
Flammia said. According to the California Department of Public
Health, blood and urine tests showed elevated levels of mercury.
Further investigation revealed a family had been using the homemade
cream and had relatives in Virginia using the cream. Members of the
California family did show symptoms of mercury poisoning, the
health department said.

Date Published: May 30, 2010 - 6:43 am
Since many dermatologists insist that diet has no significant
influence over acne, one might reasonably assume that this is based
on extensive testing and hard evidence. In fact, this prevailing
wisdom is largely based on two studies performed in 1969 and 1971.
The first study conducted by the University of Pennsylvania School
of Medicine tried to establish a link between cocoa and pimples by
giving candy bars to two groups of teenagers. One group received
candy bars high in chocolate, while the other group received candy
bars that contained no cocoa. The study found that the candy bars
did not have a significant impact on acne.
The truth is, apart from anecdotal evidence, we simply don't have
enough information to say with certainty that diet does or doesn't
cause breakouts. While it makes sense from a commonsense point of
view to say that diet affects acne, as yet there isn't enough
scientific evidence to make any assumptions one way or the other.
The best way to know is to keep an acne diary: Write down foods
consumed throughout the day, keep track of the severity of acne,
and see if a pattern comes up.

Date Published: May 30, 2010 - 6:42 am
If you need to heal your acne quickly and permanently, you need to
look no further than to a natural acne cure. The difficulty is that
folks are lead to believe that the typical acne clearing product
decisions on the market today will cure their breakouts. But this
isn't true because they only treat external symptoms of your issues
without ever looking after the real problems that begins inside of
your body.This is the real secret to acne skin care. Bacteria, oil
and dead skin are only external issues that stem from a deeper
problem inside of you. Treating these external symptoms with a
typical acne clearing product, like benzoyl peroxide, only causes
the symptoms to go away for a short while, only to reappear again
shortly after. What's worse is these products can lose their
effectiveness and you also have to keep taking them. That's where a
natural acne cure comes in. This is the only acne skin care routine
which will ever work for you as you treat what's causing the real
problems. If you do that,manolo blahnik muenchen, your bacteria,
oil and dead skin problems will all disappear soon after. Would you
wish to keep paying loads of bucks a year to try and clear skin, or
would you rather pay nothing and cure your acne forever?Seems like
a simple choice, does it not?Well I am not lying when I say it's
free. A natural acne cure does not cost a thing because all you're
doing is changing your lifestyle a bit. Nothing to extraordinary or
radical is necessary and you do not want to buy another acne
clearing product ever again.So in order to start your proper acne
skin care regimen,manolo blahnik deutschland, there's a few ground
rules to lay out. First,jimmy choo schuhe, there is a link between
diet and acne. It has been proven beyond a shadow of a doubt. The
sole study that disproves the link lasted a complete week while
studies that prove the link lasted for YEARS.Second a natural acne
cure does not revolve around just diet. There are several key
aspects to acne skin care that include exercise, getting enough
sunlight, drinking plenty of water,christian louboutin, sleeping
enough and having a good mind-set. Some folks by mistake think that
they need to eat one hundred percent healthy all the time to be
clear and this just isn't true. Lastly throw out any acne clearing
product you have in your house

Date Published: May 30, 2010 - 6:35 am