Acne

Condition
  • Menstrual cycle: 80% of immune system drops during menstruation to support reproductive system
  • Strep bacteria: Acne is bacterial from the strep family - same strep that causes strep throat, UTIs. Strep finds way to lymphatic system and derma, explodes into pimples
  • Viruses and bacteria: Acne is caused by streptococcus bacteria (a cofactor to Epstein-Barr Virus). Eggs contain protein that can feed pathogens already present in the body, potentially exacerbating conditions like acne.
  • NOT hormones, NOT clogged pores: Acne is NOT caused by hormones or clogged pores — this is a false belief from conventional medicine that blames women's hormones for everything. Hormones only matter because they lower immunity, which lets strep escape. Acne is new — women didn't suddenly develop hormones in the last 60-80 years. Sebum oil is skin's defense trying to trap strep.
  • Strep transmission pathways: Antibiotic-resistant strep strains are transmitted between people sexually and through casual contact (drinking from shared glasses at parties, restaurant utensils, handshakes). Multiple strains can coexist in one person's system. When strep is passed from person to person, the recipient may develop UTIs, bladder infections, or other strep manifestations they never had before, in addition to acne.
  • Antibiotic-resistant strep: Antibiotics from childhood create antibiotic-resistant strep strains. Antibiotics stored in liver feeding strep — refined petroleum and plastics in antibiotics feeding strep. Antibiotics initially helped acne because acne is bacterial, but overuse created antibiotic-resistant strains. Different mutations of strep have changed the shape of acne — pimples are changing shape and color.
  • Adrenaline stress: Corrosive adrenaline coursing through veins and leaking through skin
  • Dairy, eggs, wheat feeding strep in subcutaneous tissue
  • Eggs: Eating eggs in between breakouts is why acne comes and goes in a lot of people
  • EBV: Epstein-Barr virus
  • Gluten feeding strep: Gluten feeds streptococcus bacteria which then causes cystic acne
  • Toxic heavy metals: Heavy metals contribute to acne by feeding the underlying streptococcus infection
  • Lowered immunity: Lowered immunity: Immune system drops during puberty, allowing strep to surface
  • One or more strains from the over 50 groups of Streptococcus bacteria residing both in your liver and your lymphatic system. Having acne doesn't necessarily mean having a strep infection such as strep throat. Acne develops when strep has made a long-term home inside the body after (sometimes long after) a strep-related infection.
  • Sluggish liver: Overloaded liver can cause acne, liver is under duress
  • Refined petroleum and plastics in antibiotics feeding strep
  • Antibiotic-resistant strep: Some acne very stubborn because of antibiotic-resistant strep with different power, strength, abilities to evade immune system
  • EBV co-infection with strep: Some people have both strep (causing classic cystic acne) AND Epstein-Barr virus in their liver, producing acne alongside eczema-like skin reactions simultaneously. This happens when someone has both strep in the lymphatic system AND an EBV infection in the liver. Both must be addressed — antibacterial approaches for strep, antiviral approaches for EBV.
  • Oxidative strep: Strep bacteria rise up when immune system drops from stress
  • Strep from childhood infections: Strep that causes adult acne commonly traces back to childhood strep throat, tonsillitis, ear infections, bronchitis, or pneumonia. Once strep enters the lymphatic system, it can reside there chronically at a low level — even with no symptoms. If someone had recurrent strep throat, tonsillitis, or ear infections as a child, they are more likely to develop acne. Babies with ear infections grow up with more antibiotic-resistant strep strains.
  • Streptococcus: Streptococcus bacteria causes acne
  • Streptococcus bacteria: Streptococcus bacteria causes acne
  • Sebum oil misunderstanding: The sebum oil that accumulates under the skin during acne is NOT the cause of acne — it is the body's defense mechanism, produced to try to trap and stop strep bacteria from causing harm. Medical science calls it an oil buildup; the truth is the oil is there to try to stop the strep. Even recommending antibiotics inadvertently validated that acne is bacterial, not hormonal or oil-related.

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