Adventures in Accutane Therapy
...better living thru chemistry and other such medicated madness.


Wednesday, May 26, 2004


day seventy, week ten

HALF-WAY MARK, and hopefully it's downhill from here. As the official halfway post, I'd like to note that my skin isn't really any better than it was when I started the accutane therapy. Over the last 2 and a half months, I've seen my skin get dramatically worse, then dramatically better, and now I'm right about where I was at the beginning of all of this. Frankly I'm getting a little frustrated, but I'm sure it's just a reaction to the dosage increase and I'll be seeing improvements soon. I hope.

current medications/supplements:

  • accutane 80mg
  • Erythromycin
  • Yasmin
  • vitamin e

current products:
  • Neosporin cream with pain relief
  • Visine Original and Visine for contacts
  • St. Ives 24-hour lotion
  • cetaphil moisturizing lotion
  • cetaphil face wash
  • blistex lip balm
  • lots of water

current symptoms:
  • moodiness, depression
  • fatigue, muscle aches
  • irritation, anger
  • bloody nose
  • severly dry, chafed skin and rashes all over the place
  • extremely dry, irritated eyes
  • dry lips
  • dehydration


WEEK TEN REPORT: No changes from last week, I still look and feel like a lumpy troll. I'm generally plain old grouchy most of the time, constant mood swings. No desire to kill myself yet, so that's a plus. I'd probably feel a lot better if I got more sleep, but that's my own fault.

RECOMMENDATIONS: Still nothing. Too cranky.



The Guinea Pig


My name is Allisan, I'm a 21-year-old college student with very bad acne and a chip on my shoulder. I'm taking Accutane to kick the thing in the butt once and for all, and documenting the experience for the benefit of anyone else considering giving it a shot. Read on, fellow acne sufferers!!


Archives


03/01/2004 - 04/01/2004
04/01/2004 - 05/01/2004
05/01/2004 - 06/01/2004
06/01/2004 - 07/01/2004
07/01/2004 - 08/01/2004


About Accutane


In Laman's terms... Accutane limits the body's production a natural oil called Sebum that builds up in your pores and causes acne. Generally you spend 5 months on it, and most people see results within 2 months. It has a 75% success rate after the first round, 85% after 2 rounds - that means that the acne never, ever comes back for most people. During the course of the therapy, the most common side effects are dry flaky skin, chapped lips, dehydration, irritation while wearing contacts, and backaches. Basically it makes your body tissue really sensitive to EVERYTHING. Some people also experience moodiness and, in rare cases, severe depression. It also causes some nasty birth defects, so they make absolutely sure you can't get pregnant while you're on it.


Products I Swear By


  • Mary Kay medium coverage foundation
  • blistex original lip balm
  • neosporin cream (not ointment)
  • St. Ives 24-Hour body lotion
  • Cetaphil moisturizer & face wash
  • Generic vitamin e supplements
  • Visine original eye drops



Products I Swear *At*


Blistex Complete Moisture lip balm - Jackie recommends it, but I disagree! It's really thin (heavy petroleum-based ointments are the best) and makes your breath smell funky.
Victoria's Secret lotion - Love the smell, but it stings like a mofo. Same goes for Bath&Body or any other heavily scented lotion, accutane makes your skin VERY sensitive to that kind of stuff.
Proactiv products - great for semi-problematic skin, but totally useless for severe acne. They *do* give your money back, so it *is* worth a try. But if you're serious about dealing with your acne, try something else.
erythromycin - if you get this, make sure they prescribe the capsules, not the tablets. This stuff is powerful, it can really upset your stomach.
Yasmin birth control - makes acne *worse*, turns you into a hormonal one-woman soap opera.
Chapstick brand lip balm - nothin but glorified ear wax. Buy the medicated stuff, folks.



More Accutane Stuff


Fun With Accutane - Jackie's journal
Accutane Information Page - the real deal, run by the FDA.
The Skin Site - very comprehensive and easy to understand.
Accutane Action Group - anti-accutane awareness group.