More on the possible use of Nizoral shampoo for acne!
#1
Posted 02 February 2007 - 04:31 PM
Somebody just brought to my attention the following Web site article about that very same idea. Following the link is the article itself. Although it was written with bodybuilders (steroid users) in mind, it obviously still has implications for the typical teenaged acne sufferer. Although I have minor quibbles with some of the things the author says, I agree with the general thrust of his argument:
http://www.mindandmuscle.net/mindandmuscle...mp;artID=999412
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Steroid Side Effects: Fight Acne with Shampoo?
by Anthony Roberts
One of the most notorious side effects experienced with the use of Anabolic/Androgenic Steroids is the development of Acne. This is, for the more hardcore users, not too big of a deal. Granted, if you are three hundred pounds ripped, are balding with a permanent red face from high blood pressure, and develop a bunch of zits suddenly, that last part is probably the least of your concerns. Large oil filled zits just aren’t a pressing concern to the next Mr. Olympia. However, for most of us, and especially first time steroid users or females, zits are usually something we want to avoid. Acne is the most media-popularized side effect of Anabolic Steroid use, and (next to weight gain) the most outwardly recognizable.
Females especially, want to avoid this for aesthetic reasons, and it’s actually through interaction with one of the female moderators on a bodybuilding message board that I was most recently reminded of this point. She had been experiencing pretty bad acne from Anavar use, but she couldn’t find a suitable answer for how to get rid of it. The most typical answer to the question was “use Retin-A,” which was spouted by nearly everyone she spoke to. It is unfortunate that Retin-A, for many reasons, is a very poor choice for her purposes (one reason being it doesn’t address the cause of the acne appropriately, and it is also a prescription medication). In this particular case, I told her to take some Nizoral (Ketoconazole) Shampoo and rub it on her back and face as a body wash. Huh? What? Shampoo on your face and back? Shampoo is for your hair! Yeah, well that’s what everyone thought. Until now. Okay, I know: shampoo on your face is weird. But, I wouldn’t be writing for Mind and Muscle if I wasn’t three things:
a.) Weird (in the public’s eye)
b.) Creative
c.) Weird
Now, let’s talk about DHT and how it causes acne. We will then discuss why using Nizoral shampoo would be good for getting rid of acne. Development of AAS-related acne and the extent to which it is experienced can be due to a number of varying factors, with the steroids and dosages used being primary factors. It has been established that the receptors of the sebaceous glands have a particularly high affinity to Dihydrotestosterone (1)(2)(3). Anecdotally, it would also seem that DHT-derivations (Winstrol, etc…) cause more acne than others (Testosterone or 19-Nor derived steroids). Thus, we can also safely assume that steroids, which are affected by the 5-alpha-reductase enzyme and turned into DHT in the body, will also be highly probable to cause acne. Increased sebaceous gland activity causes oily skin, and this, in combination with bacteria and dead skin caused by normal wear and tear, then causes pores to become clogged more quickly than the body can deal with them (or than you can exfoliate or unclog them). This causes visible acne and generally terrible looking skin.
So DHT is a primary culprit in all those nasty zits, right? Well, stay with me here, because the next part may get slightly complicated. Nizoral shampoo (the chemical in it is Ketoconazole) is actually a topical anti-androgen. Remember, the catalyst for acne is initially DHT (an androgen) and the sebaceous activity it causes. When used topically, in shampoo form, this particular compound’s effects are limited to the skin/scalp and are not systemic (affecting the whole body) unless you take it orally (drink the shampoo). Ketoconazole’s pharmacokinetics have been studied with oral ingestion (they make a pill, you don’t drink the shampoo of course), and it has been determined that even orally, it is effective against acne, because oral ketoconazole has three delivery routes to the skin (4):
1. Passive uptake by keratinocytes in the basal layer
2. Excretion through the sweat glands
3. (The important one) A massive excretion through the sebaceous glands
In that same study, sebum levels compared with the plasma levels are very high, even with oral ingestion (4), which prompted researchers to simply create a shampoo from the base chemical (Ketoconazole) to prevent androgenic alopecia (balding) caused by DHT. Unfortunately, oral ingestion of an anti-androgen will cause an anti-anabolic effect as well. However, there is almost no effective plasma level to cause an anti-androgenic effect in your body when you topically apply it (4). So this should keep anyone from needlessly worrying about the possibility of an anti-anabolic effect to be had from topically applying Nizoral (even though it’s technically an anti-androgen).
Lets back up a bit and let me give you a little background on how I stumbled on all of this roughly 8 years ago.
I figured out that Nizoral would prevent acne when I had some acne on my forehead during my first cycle. I had been using Nizoral to prevent hair loss, and I always got some shampoo on the top of my forehead when I washed my hair. I soon noticed that the area the shampoo came into contact with was free of acne. So, long story short, I started using it as a topical acne treatment and my steroid-induced acne cleared right up. I tried it on my back acne, and it went away. My girlfriend at the time had some acne, and it cleared that up too. A few years ago, I actually looked for validation on my theory, and found it. The study I first found (4) examined the pill form, but the shampoo is the same active ingredient, and won't have a noticeable systemic effect, but rather will have a localized one wherever you apply it.
Interestingly, about the same year that I had discovered the use of a topical anti-androgen for use in preventing DHT-caused acne (steroid related in my case) scientists completed a study basically saying the same thing. Although I had discovered this use for topical anti-androgens in my shower, and they discovered it in a lab, it’s basically the same idea.
The study I found from that year examining a topical anti-androgen and its effects on the sebaceous glands was very interesting. When a topical anti-androgen was used on rodents, the scientists noted that sebaceous glandular and ductal regression was quite profound. This strongly suggests that a topical anti-androgen could effectively counteract endogenous androgens resulting in a suppression of growth of the sebaceous glands while leaving serum concentrations of both testosterone and dihydrotestosterone intact and not reduced (5). This means, for all intents and purposes, that Nizoral’s anti-androgenic effect on your skin will prevent acne, without it having a systemic effect on your body. In simplest terms, it will leave 100% of the muscle building effects imparted by the steroids you are taking totally unaffected.
Shampoo. It’s not just for hair anymore.
References
1. Am J Clin Dermatol. 2002;3(8):571-8.
2. Clin Dermatol. 2004 Sep-Oct;22(5):419-28.
3. Pol Merkuriusz Lek. 2004 May;16(95):490-2.
4. Int J Tissue React. 1988;10(2):111-3
5. Skin Pharmacol. 1997;10(5-6):288-97.
#2
Posted 02 February 2007 - 05:54 PM
This does the same thing while treating the other causes. It has NDGA, one of the few products out there that does this. NDGA is one of the few thigns we have now that can normalize keratinization, which IMO is the key to stopping acne. Indeed you can have excess sebum, bacteria and an inflammation response but you can't get acne to form(Maybe blakcheads), if you shed your skin normally. When ihad acne I was looking all over for things that incorporated NDGA but very few did.
The shampoo is probably cheaper though.
#3
Posted 02 February 2007 - 06:39 PM
This does the same thing while treating the other causes. It has NDGA, one of the few products out there that does this.
Well, you're being a little vague when you say that "NDGA....does this". NDGA does WHAT?
Yes. That's my main point: Nizoral shampoo is relatively cheap, and easy to obtain. People should recognize it as a possible new weapon to use against acne.
Bryan
#4
Posted 02 February 2007 - 07:41 PM
Last time I checked it was 29.00 for the bottle and the lotion taht is even more concentrated. Still more expensive than all but the best quality salon shampoos.
Sorry, didn't meant to derail your thread, I though this product could be an alternative to those that don't want to use the shampoo.
#5
Posted 02 February 2007 - 07:58 PM
This does the same thing while treating the other causes. It has NDGA, one of the few products out there that does this. NDGA is one of the few thigns we have now that can normalize keratinization, which IMO is the key to stopping acne. Indeed you can have excess sebum, bacteria and an inflammation response but you can't get acne to form(Maybe blakcheads), if you shed your skin normally. When ihad acne I was looking all over for things that incorporated NDGA but very few did.
Have you tried this product? Any comments?
How does it compare with retinoic acid?
#6
Posted 11 February 2007 - 04:06 PM
#7
Posted 02 April 2007 - 11:42 PM
My face is getting a bit dry from all these so I spray it with called Na-PCA from Twinlabs. A great moisturizer which has aloe vera. It's only been less than a week and it seems that things are under control.
#8
Posted 04 July 2009 - 11:19 PM
I got acne on my face and serious acne on the back. I also had very serious dandruff.
My dandruff flakes were so bad, you couldn't call them flakes and it used to be nonstop. I had horrible dandruff for a whopping 16 years (it started when I was 17). I went to many doctors and no medication had any effect. I used Selsun medicated shampoo that is available in Walmart, etc to control it to some extent for about 6 years. That was the closest to a good dandruff shampoo for me. Selsun turned my very serious dandruff into ordinary dandruff. I also tried a host of other shampoos (Head and shoulders is the worst -- pretty useless when it comes to addressing serious dandruff). Head & Shoulders controlled my dandruff for all of 1 hour
After reading this thread on acne, I decided to give Nizoral a shot on my back and face. I was hoping for a second round of magic. Today I applied Nizoral for the first time on my back. No love yet
sn
#9
Posted 04 July 2009 - 11:26 PM
#10
Posted 05 July 2010 - 09:46 AM
After reading this post, I tried the over the counter version of nizoral shampoo on my face, its only the first day but, already my skin feels a bit calmer and for the first time in a while the skin on my face as a whole doesn't feel stiff and painful as it usually does.
#11
Posted 05 July 2010 - 01:09 PM
#12
Posted 12 September 2010 - 10:35 PM
Has anybody else tried it?
And since it is an anti-androgen, would using it decrease testosterone production throughout your whole body? If I'm going to use this, I don't want it to effect my whole body.
Edited by ParanoidAndroid, 12 September 2010 - 10:39 PM.
#13
Posted 13 September 2010 - 11:37 AM
As far as a topical antiandrogenic effect is concerned, yes. That's correct.
#14
Posted 13 September 2010 - 11:43 AM
The usual response to systemic antiandrogens is to INCREASE testosterone production, not decrease it. However, Nizoral shampoo has been tested pretty thoroughly, and found not to produce any significant systemic absorption of ketoconazole.
#15
Posted 13 September 2010 - 03:48 PM
Do you know of anybody that has used Nizoral shampoo to successfully reduce sebum production? And if so, how would you use it? Like regular facial cleanser or would I have to let it sit on my skin for a couple minutes?
#16
Posted 09 November 2010 - 02:01 AM
#17
Posted 29 November 2010 - 02:54 PM
I'm trying it now.
#18
Posted 30 November 2010 - 07:15 AM
#19
Posted 30 July 2011 - 11:17 AM
I'm starting it today.
#20
Posted 08 September 2011 - 01:19 PM
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