Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Roche pulled Accutane from the US in 2009 but is still selling it elsewhere. Generic isotretinoin is available by prescription in the US.
Yikes, really?! I took it in the mid to late 90s. Is there anything I should know about?
I took Accutane in the mid 80s and compared notes with a friend who has taken Accutane. There are some side affects "while taking the drug," and major warnings about getting pregnant. The extreme vitamin A levels will cause serious birth defects.
Here's the only permanent side affect that my friend and I experienced- diminished night vision. I never could realize why I seemed to have more difficulty driving at night, especially in rain until my friend told me it was a side affect from the elevated levels of Vit. A from accutane. If you don't have this issue, it might only be experienced by some people. Another friend who took accutane at the same time, claims she has never lost any night vision. Other than what I mentioned- we're all otherwise healthy.
I have never had any other side affect and the night vision issue is minor (and the only vision loss)-- strangely worth getting through teen acne.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Roche pulled Accutane from the US in 2009 but is still selling it elsewhere. Generic isotretinoin is available by prescription in the US.
Yikes, really?! I took it in the mid to late 90s. Is there anything I should know about?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:01:12 pp: it is absolutely not true that good skin is "all about good hygiene" and you're insulting lots of people by saying that. My DD washed her face religiously but still needed accutane. It worked beautifully, by the way.
+1. All about good hygiene? Please. I could have scrubbed off layers of my skin and I still would have had acne.
+2. Clearly someone who has never had to deal with severe hormonal acne. Hygiene has very little to do with it. And OP, "cream of the crop genes"? Do you actually believe that? I would guess better nutrition and access to medical care, plus parents who have the time and money to help their children address skin issues.
Anonymous wrote:I choose not to put my son on anything like that. He will grow out of it. I don't think it is a big deal to him as he does not even commit to washing his face daily.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yesterday I was at an event at the most expensive private school in my area (not in DC and not my child’s school) and noticed that none of the tweens or teenagers had any acne. 195 boys & girls from 11-17 years old and not a pimple in sight and no noticeable cover-up on the girls. At my child's public school most kids have some sort of acne, including him. Are the medical treatments really that effective now for those that can afford the best. Were they that good 20-30 years ago and it just wasn’t done in my middle-class social circle? Also, we live in a smaller community, not really suggesting inbreeding (haha) but could it just be cream of the crop genes?
Maybe public verses private. Plenty of teens with acne at Longfellow and McLean High School.
It's not a public vs private school thing. it depends on whether parents are invested in eliminating acne. Some aren't. My parents took my brother to a dermatologist and refused (I asked) to do the same for me. We were both in private schools. I had terrible cystic acne, too.
Why did they refuse to take you but did take your brother?
Anonymous wrote:Yesterday I was at an event at the most expensive private school in my area (not in DC and not my child’s school) and noticed that none of the tweens or teenagers had any acne. 195 boys & girls from 11-17 years old and not a pimple in sight and no noticeable cover-up on the girls. At my child's public school most kids have some sort of acne, including him. Are the medical treatments really that effective now for those that can afford the best. Were they that good 20-30 years ago and it just wasn’t done in my middle-class social circle? Also, we live in a smaller community, not really suggesting inbreeding (haha) but could it just be cream of the crop genes?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:01:12 pp: it is absolutely not true that good skin is "all about good hygiene" and you're insulting lots of people by saying that. My DD washed her face religiously but still needed accutane. It worked beautifully, by the way.
+1. All about good hygiene? Please. I could have scrubbed off layers of my skin and I still would have had acne.
Anonymous wrote:01:12 pp: it is absolutely not true that good skin is "all about good hygiene" and you're insulting lots of people by saying that. My DD washed her face religiously but still needed accutane. It worked beautifully, by the way.