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Salicylic Acid And Glycolic Acid Together?

MemberMember
1
(@simon12345)

Posted : 03/01/2014 11:03 pm

So a year ago i basically got my skin clear using a 2% salicylic wash and 5% BP which worked very well after a while. Since then idk why i've been constantly changing products and i am thinking of going back to that formula. Yet the problem i have is not so much pimples but more red marks which are all over my chin. I know salicylic acid is a chemical exfoliant but i have heard the Glycolic acid is aswell.

So my question is, can i use salycilic acid as a wash, then BP as a treatment, then Glycolic acid? Or should i not use glycolic acid everyday, but on the days that i do use glycolic, use a gentle fash wash instead of salycilic?

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MemberMember
39
(@michelle-reece)

Posted : 03/02/2014 1:34 am

So a year ago i basically got my skin clear using a 2% salicylic wash and 5% BP which worked very well after a while. Since then idk why i've been constantly changing products and i am thinking of going back to that formula. Yet the problem i have is not so much pimples but more red marks which are all over my chin. I know salicylic acid is a chemical exfoliant but i have heard the Glycolic acid is aswell.

So my question is, can i use salycilic acid as a wash, then BP as a treatment, then Glycolic acid? Or should i not use glycolic acid everyday, but on the days that i do use glycolic, use a gentle fash wash instead of salycilic?

You could. The problem is that there's a possibility you could irritate your skin.

Leave-on treatments are more effective than washes.

You should use sunscreen with SPF 30+ if you use any exfoliating treatments.

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MemberMember
1
(@simon12345)

Posted : 03/02/2014 2:35 am

Thanks! I think i will use the salycilic wash and BP in the morning then salycilic wash and glycolic acid at night unless anyone has any better ideas?

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0
(@reneebrown)

Posted : 03/02/2014 3:52 am

Make sure to put on sunscreen! glycolic makes your skin more sensitive to the suns rays.

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7
(@bonsai77)

Posted : 03/02/2014 8:21 am

I use glycolic acid facewash everyday and my skin has never looked better.

I still get cysts but they are slowly stopping, my red marks have gone and closed comedones too

salicylic acid was a bit harsh for my skin, not sure why. I have very fair Japanese skin which is sensitive, but gycolic acid is my friend.

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MemberMember
1
(@simon12345)

Posted : 03/03/2014 2:36 am

Thanks for your responses. But now i think of it, the BP is the reason why i got so many red marks in the first place, so should i still use it? I still get pimples around my chin but majority is red marks

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39
(@michelle-reece)

Posted : 03/03/2014 2:44 am

Thanks for your responses. But now i think of it, the BP is the reason why i got so many red marks in the first place, so should i still use it? I still get pimples around my chin but majority is red marks

For occasional inflammatory acne, use it as a spot treatment. If you have inflamed pimples all over, you can apply it all over, and I would suggest going to a derm at that point, because you may have to go on at least antibiotics.

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MemberMember
7
(@bonsai77)

Posted : 03/03/2014 5:43 am

I was tempted to put BP on my red marks.

I thought that it bleaches my clothes, why not my skin? and the peeling means its exfoliating right?- Wrong.

If anything, it just makes them redder, use a exfoliant treatment like the glycolic acid, it works much better.

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39
(@michelle-reece)

Posted : 03/03/2014 6:17 pm

I was tempted to put BP on my red marks.

I thought that it bleaches my clothes, why not my skin? and the peeling means its exfoliating right?- Wrong.

If anything, it just makes them redder, use a exfoliant treatment like the glycolic acid, it works much better.

Red marks themselves? No. Active pimples? Yes.

Keep in mind that redness = inflammation. You really can't halt or decrease just inflammation on the skin--inflammation means your skin is trying to heal. Orange/yellowish/brown marks = excess melanin. That you can decrease topically. Beware that in darker skin types (African-American descent) the inflammation is more brown than anything.

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