Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 14 yo son’s (non-cystic but pretty significant) acne has improved significantly with very, very close compliance to a multi-step routine prescribed by his dermatologist, down to the timing (e.g., wash face, wait an hour, apply cream). The difference between before (using the meds but not following her very specific schedule) and after is pretty dramatic. It’s not 100% cleared up, but it’s much better.
We have some family medical history that makes both antibiotics and accutane risky, so we’re doing everything we can to avoid that path.
OP here. Can I ask what topicals he is using? Do you have to supervise all of this? My son has ADHD and his meds have worn off by bedtime so I have to stand next to him to walk him through it.
Anonymous wrote:I've got 3 teenagers. One teenager can control her acne with OTC topical products, another just uses soap/water and spot treatments. The third has used topicals (OTC and prescription), oral antibiotics and, when those failed, Accutane. He does not have cystic acne but it was so severe that it was starting to scar. He's now on month 6 and the difference is incredible. Until this month, dry lips were the only negative side effect. This month, he's started to have very dry skin on his forearms. Both side effects are managed well with lotion/vaseline. FWIW, he's also on an SSRI for anxiety and we've noticed no negative change in his mental health - in fact, he's in a much better place since he's no longer self-conscious about his complexion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP again. Is Accutane still a 4-6 month course? I took it way back when for about 5 months. It is easier for boys to take it since they don't have to worry about pregnancy, right?
Each of my sons did six months.
Anonymous wrote:Mine has been on two different antibiotics so far. The first one resolved about 80% of it. I'm concerned about trying accutane due to family history of liver disease.
Anonymous wrote:My 14 yo son’s (non-cystic but pretty significant) acne has improved significantly with very, very close compliance to a multi-step routine prescribed by his dermatologist, down to the timing (e.g., wash face, wait an hour, apply cream). The difference between before (using the meds but not following her very specific schedule) and after is pretty dramatic. It’s not 100% cleared up, but it’s much better.
We have some family medical history that makes both antibiotics and accutane risky, so we’re doing everything we can to avoid that path.
Anonymous wrote:How do you know if it’s cystic acne? DS is 14 and his acne is bad, much worse than anything DH or I had.
Anonymous wrote:OP again. Is Accutane still a 4-6 month course? I took it way back when for about 5 months. It is easier for boys to take it since they don't have to worry about pregnancy, right?