![]() ![]() To tackle an under-the-skin pimple, we knew we needed a physical element that could reach it. While those treatments typically contained blemish-busting ingredients (like salicylic acid ), the problem was that the ingredients couldn’t really reach the source of the pimple to attack and eliminate it. ![]() In the past, outside of an injection at the dermatologist’s office, people had to treat blind pimples with topical creams, lotions or gels. WATCH: See how Micropoint for Blemishes helps bring a hidden pimple to a head. Healthy skin cells eventually replace the mark left behind by a pimple. White blood cells fight the infection, die and accumulate, which creates a pustule or whitehead. This is the type of pimple that looks like it's about to pop– and spill! But don't pop! Just stick on an Original Mighty Patch! You can use Micropoint here too, in order to speed up the pimple’s transition to a whitehead. īacteria grows to form an infection and the skin ruptures, forming a red, slightly more visible bump. You can use Micropoint here in the very early stage, and completely heal the pimple before an infection/whitehead even forms. Micropoint speeds up the pimple lifecycle, so you don’t have to wait around forever for a hidden pimple to come to a head.įrom birth to death, here’s exactly what happens when you get a pimple.ĭead skin cells and excess sebum begin to create a blockage in the pores, resulting in a bump under the skin. The bad news is that it can take weeks to months for that to happen.Īnd that’s exactly why we created Micropoint for Blemishes, to help early-stage pimples heal faster. The good news is that the majority of blind pimples will eventually emerge and heal on their own. They are caused by the usual acne culprits: hormonal fluctuations, overproduction of sebum, and congested or clogged pores. These pimples are “unpoppable,” can be painful to the touch and often appear red from inflammation of the surrounding skin. Whatever you want to call it, acne has developed under the skin’s surface and has not yet come to a “head” (as it does in your typical whitehead). You can feel it coming, and it kind of hurts, but it hasn’t quite reared its ugly head yet.īlind pimple, hidden pimple, early-stage pimple, under-the-skin pimple. ![]() Even if you don’t know it by name, you know the kind of pimple we’re talking about. ![]()
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