datboijj
Fuchsia
- Joined
- Nov 15, 2020
- Posts
- 13,313
- Reputation
- 16,617
Most guys think acne is just about "dirty skin" or "high hormones." They’re wrong. You can have high androgens and zero acne if your sebum composition is elite.
Studies provided for each claim.
The difference between a "pizza face" and someone with permanent clear skin (God-tier genetics) comes down to the molecular stability of the oil your pores pump out.
1. The "Linoleic Acid" Ratio (The Flow State)
Healthy sebum should be a liquid, protective lubricant.
• Clear Skin Profile: High in Linoleic Acid. This keeps the oil thin and fluid. It flows out of the pore effortlessly.
• Acne Profile: Low in Linoleic, High in Oleic Acid. This makes your sebum thick, "glue-like," and sticky.
• The Result: When your oil is thick, it traps dead skin cells
inside the pore like a cork in a bottle. You aren't "dirty"; your oil is just too viscous to escape.
Study : https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/2936775/
2. The Squalene "Rust" Factor
Your skin produces a lipid called Squalene. On its own, it’s fine. But it is chemically "unstable."
• The Problem: When Squalene hits the air, it can oxidize (essentially "rust"). Oxidized squalene is highly comedogenic (pore-clogging) and inflammatory.
• The Shield: Clear-skin elites secrete high levels of Vitamin E directly into their sebum. This acts as a stabilizer, preventing the oil from "rotting" on their face. If you lack this antioxidant "shield," your oil becomes toxic to your own skin the moment it reaches the surface.
Study:
Sebaceous gland secretion is a major physiologic route of vitamin E delivery to skin - PubMed
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/10594744/#:~:text=Using standardized techniques for stratum,stratum corneum and decreased gradually
/
3. The "Baby Skin" Comparison
Ever wonder why you can’t fingerprint a baby? It’s because their sebum is composed of volatile, short-chain fatty acids. Their oil is so "unstable" it literally evaporates off the skin within 24 hours.
• As we age, our sebum shifts to heavy, long-chain wax esters.
• If your diet or environment triggers a shift toward reactive fatty chains without the proper antioxidant protection, you get a localized "chemical fire" (a.k.a. a cyst).
Study : https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc680942/
How to Fix the Composition (Practical Application)
If you want to move the needle on your skin quality, you have to change the "recipe" of your sebum from the inside out:
• Up the Antioxidants: Supplementing with Vitamin E (specifically Alpha-tocopherol) and Zinc helps stabilize the squalene in your pores.
• Balance the Fats: Focus on high-quality Omega-3s and avoid "slop" oils (refined seed oils) that can contribute to a pro-inflammatory sebum profile.
• Topical Stability: Use stable oils (like Squalane—the stable version of Squalene) if you moisturize, but avoid heavy oleic-rich oils like olive oil which can "glue" pores shut for many.
Bottom Line: Stop obsessing over "killing bacteria" and start focusing on the chemistry of your oil. If your sebum is fluid and stable, the bacteria has nothing to feed on and no "trap" to grow in.
Studies provided for each claim.
The difference between a "pizza face" and someone with permanent clear skin (God-tier genetics) comes down to the molecular stability of the oil your pores pump out.
1. The "Linoleic Acid" Ratio (The Flow State)
Healthy sebum should be a liquid, protective lubricant.
• Clear Skin Profile: High in Linoleic Acid. This keeps the oil thin and fluid. It flows out of the pore effortlessly.
• Acne Profile: Low in Linoleic, High in Oleic Acid. This makes your sebum thick, "glue-like," and sticky.
• The Result: When your oil is thick, it traps dead skin cells
inside the pore like a cork in a bottle. You aren't "dirty"; your oil is just too viscous to escape.
Study : https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/2936775/
2. The Squalene "Rust" Factor
Your skin produces a lipid called Squalene. On its own, it’s fine. But it is chemically "unstable."
• The Problem: When Squalene hits the air, it can oxidize (essentially "rust"). Oxidized squalene is highly comedogenic (pore-clogging) and inflammatory.
• The Shield: Clear-skin elites secrete high levels of Vitamin E directly into their sebum. This acts as a stabilizer, preventing the oil from "rotting" on their face. If you lack this antioxidant "shield," your oil becomes toxic to your own skin the moment it reaches the surface.
Study:
Sebaceous gland secretion is a major physiologic route of vitamin E delivery to skin - PubMed
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/10594744/#:~:text=Using standardized techniques for stratum,stratum corneum and decreased gradually
/
3. The "Baby Skin" Comparison
Ever wonder why you can’t fingerprint a baby? It’s because their sebum is composed of volatile, short-chain fatty acids. Their oil is so "unstable" it literally evaporates off the skin within 24 hours.
• As we age, our sebum shifts to heavy, long-chain wax esters.
• If your diet or environment triggers a shift toward reactive fatty chains without the proper antioxidant protection, you get a localized "chemical fire" (a.k.a. a cyst).
Study : https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc680942/
How to Fix the Composition (Practical Application)
If you want to move the needle on your skin quality, you have to change the "recipe" of your sebum from the inside out:
• Up the Antioxidants: Supplementing with Vitamin E (specifically Alpha-tocopherol) and Zinc helps stabilize the squalene in your pores.
• Balance the Fats: Focus on high-quality Omega-3s and avoid "slop" oils (refined seed oils) that can contribute to a pro-inflammatory sebum profile.
• Topical Stability: Use stable oils (like Squalane—the stable version of Squalene) if you moisturize, but avoid heavy oleic-rich oils like olive oil which can "glue" pores shut for many.
Bottom Line: Stop obsessing over "killing bacteria" and start focusing on the chemistry of your oil. If your sebum is fluid and stable, the bacteria has nothing to feed on and no "trap" to grow in.