humidity

I listened with a bit of interest a few weeks ago as a
number of folks on this list discussed the effects of
humidity on sebderm knowing that I would be going on a
week-long vacation in one of the most humid areas of
the United States, southern Louisiana. To be honest,
I didn’t expect much improvement, but by Day #2 of my
vacation, I NO LONGER HAD ANY SEBDERM SYMPTOMS
WHATSOEVER. The flaking and redness were completely
gone.

When I returned to the hot, dry Arizona desert where I
live, my skin was red, irritated and flaking like a
molting reptile by the next day. In an effort to be
sure that it was, in fact, the humidity that caused
this dramatic improvement, I have been analyzing all

of the potential factors that could have played a
role. One, my diet — it consisted almost exclusively
of red beans & rice, cheese & shrimp sandwiches, and
beer. Oh, yeah, I did eat a lot of pecan pie and ice
cream. So I doubt that helped :) The water in the
south is really soft, and it is tough to get all of
the soap off of your skin, so I spent lots of time in
long, hot showers, and I washed my face with the same
soap and frequency, but with a longer rinse time to
try to get off the soap. Here in AZ the water is very
hard. Also, in humid climates I believe there are
more mold spores hanging around — could mold play a
helpful role?

That’s all I could come up with. I definitely drank
LESS water than I usually do. My diet was even fuller
that usual with foods that some feel are "bad" sebderm
foods, like cheese, bread, rice, bleu cheese. I drank
even more beer than usual. I got the same amount of
sleep. Could it be soft water vs. hard, or is the
answer simply humidity? Either way, I think there is
something important to be discerned here. Those who
are using humidifiers, do you have to turn your house
into into a sauna in order to experience any benefit?
Does anyone have any enlightening ideas about this
improvement I experienced?

22 Responses to “humidity”

  1. Neva Marjory Says:

    Sandra,

    i noticed that effected skin feels good on sultry and
    humid days…. i am now using a humidifier in my bedroom
    from a week..its feels better…i can tell you more when days
    pass by..try one.. may be you can figure out yourself…

    pvk..

  2. Blair Blair Says:

    I think of all things you mention, most likely the humidity is what helped
    you–dry air is not good for the skin at all and in alot of the literature
    on psoriasis and eczema,,increased humidity is indicated as a potential
    benefit.

  3. Neva Marjory Says:

    Is there any way of increasing the humidity in your bedroom without
    having to spend loads of money on a machine?

  4. Neva Marjory Says:

    Actually, soft water allows you to rinse the soap off. You have just
    discovered how long that takes.

    Hard water reacts with soap to turn it into a waxy stearate that coats
    your skin and stearate does not feel slippery like soap. That instant
    rinse you have been feeling is just a chemical conversion, not
    removal. In Arizona, you have been wearing your soap all day, in
    slightly altered form. The more watter you apply to soapy skin, the
    more you convert soap to stearate. You simply cannot rinse it off
    effectively.

    If you cannot afford to try a water softener on your shower, to repeat
    the experiment in Arizona, you might switch from soap to detergent in
    your bath. I have hard water and used ordinary dish washing detergent
    as bath soap for years. Get one of the unscented types and try

    bathing with very small amounts of it at a time. It might help you
    keep from using too much if you thin it with water a bit. This will
    get rid of the stearate you are now wearing, and possibly reacting to.

  5. Lucas Shea Says:

    Wow! I have never heard that before! And I have
    always been really annoyed by soft water. I have a
    water softening system in my house and I don’t use it.
    Maybe I should give it a try.

  6. Odessa Estrella Says:

    On the subject of humidity - I am very amazed by the posts on the
    subject. I have lived in New Orleans all of my life and the seb derm started
    when I
    was around 26. I’m now 31 and it seems to be getting a little worse with each
    year. I
    must tell everyone - the HUMIDITY IS MURDER ON MY FACE! Whenever we have a
    humid day and I spend any time outside, day or night, my face has a major
    flareup.
    Major. The more humid it is, the worse the flareup. I pray for dry days so that
    my skin
    can heal a bit. Now that we are moving into fall, my skin is much better and
    when the
    winter comes my skin will have a few months of relief. It’s like this every
    year. I dread
    the summer and welcome the winter - perhaps because I’ve grown up here my skin

    is
    different and has different reactions to humidity? Very odd…

  7. Lucas Shea Says:

    Neil, I am very surprised that humidity helped my
    skin. I am still skeptical that that was what did it,
    because it seems so counterintuitive. Sebderm is an
    oily-skin condition, and mine worsens when I just
    THINK about moisturizer regardless of how oil-free it
    may be. It just doesn’t seem logical that our skin
    would benefit from the moisture. I wonder if there
    really may be something to the whole "soft water"
    thing, though. I despise showering in soft water, but
    I wonder if it was actually the thing that helped. It
    would be interesting to know how all of us sufferers
    weigh in on the soft water thing — do we all have
    hard water, and we are just lucky enough to react
    badly to the soap scum left on our skin? I don’t know
    if I’m buying it yet, but I’m definitely going to

    check it out. Do you have a water softener?

  8. Lucy Tawanda Says:

    my skin also doesnt like moisturisers too except vaseline or
    pure petroleum jelly… i observed moisturisers with lot of
    chemicals doesnt help me at all and in some cases my sebderm
    on my face gets worse….

  9. Odessa Estrella Says:

    I do not have a water softener. If you stay in a hotel, though, they usually
    have VERY
    soft water (and so you get the annoying sensation that you can’t wash the soap
    off).
    The hard/soft water theory is interesting. Also, if I take a warm steamy shower,
    by face
    is red for about 45 minutes afterwards, but usually subsides as I head off for
    work.

    Neil

  10. Lucas Shea Says:

    Neil, the hotels we stayed in — particularly the one
    we stayed in on Bourbon for four days — had
    unbelievably soft water. I was swearing to my husband
    about it all week. In the shower, the water pressure
    was nice and strong, so as long as I stayed in there,
    I could eventually feel like the soap was off.
    Washing face and hands in the sink, however, was so
    annoying because of the majorly soft water. It seemed
    the soap wouldn’t come off no matter how long I rinsed
    or how hard I rubbed. The water wasn’t just soft, it
    was really really soft, and that’s one reason I think
    it could be involved. Now that I hear that you live
    there and the humidity doesn’t "cure" you, it just
    makes me more curious about the soft water.

  11. Lucas Shea Says:

    It’s such a weird condition. I have done many dietary
    experiments to see what the effect would be on my
    sebderm, and I have never noticed even the slightest
    improvement. Last week when my condition completely
    healed, I was eating an exaggeratedly "bad" diet.
    Maybe that’s what we need to do! Drink more beer and
    eat more tabasco sauce! Now that’s a cure I can live
    with :)

  12. Blair Blair Says:

    Hard water contains magnesium and calcium whereas soft water is "softened"
    by eliminating these minerals through a softening process, I think mostly by
    filtering it through sodium. I used to work in a hotel and in our system, we
    had to add huge bags of rock salt to the filter device. Maybe it is the
    sodium that helps? maybe our skin is irrtatied by calcium or magnesium in
    the water? interesting anyway.

    The ph of hard vs soft water may have some influence as well as the mineral
    component.

  13. Blair Blair Says:

    Neil,
    The thing about diet is that it could take weeks or months to notice any
    improvement/worsening of the condition and that is what makes it difficult
    to determine if diet has any effect on you. Some of us can get a relatively
    short turnaround time with diet, especially with high sugar foods, but as we
    each digest and process foods differently, some of us may never be able to
    determine if avoiding certain foods help.

    I think many would have to do a long term, hardcore elimination diet, to see
    if it helps and thats what makes it tough to do and for some of us, diet
    changes may never help but for some others diet changes can at least help
    alleviate the frequencey and severity of the flares.

    What is weird though, concerning alcohol, I started drinking ALOT of red
    wine about five years ago as beer seemed to make my seb derm worse–I was

    drinking at least a bottle of red wine a day (I drank for free as a
    restaurant manager). I then stopped drinking altogether when my daughter
    was born 2.5 years ago and go out of the restaurant business.

    During the time though that I was drinking all the red wine, my skin was
    perfect, don’t recall any breakouts of any significance and I thought that
    my seb derm was gone forever. Within a month or so of quitting the red wine
    (mostly really good chianti classicos and riservas), my seb derm came back
    like I have never seen it before and was really, really chronic for the
    better part of the last 2.5 years.

    Not sure if it is coincidence or not, but now that I don’t have free access
    to the corporate liquor cabinet anywmore, not sure I could afford to drink
    this much but I am tempted to start drinking it again as much as possible.

  14. Lucas Shea Says:

    Before yesterday, I really didn’t know anything about
    soft water besides this: it is annoyingly difficult
    to rinse off soap with it, and salt is involved
    somehow.

    After doing some research, it seems that best methods
    all involve running the water over balls inside the
    system which exchange the calcium and magnesium in the
    water for sodium. According to most of the sources I
    found, hard water isn’t really rinsing the soap off of
    your skin very well, it just reacts with soap to
    create "soap curd" — in other words, a film — that
    same film that leaves hard water deposits all over
    your shower. Apparently this film is deposited not
    only on the shower, but your skin as well. Anyhow,

    apparently some people’s skin is irritated by this
    film, and it causes the skin to become red and
    inflamed! Here’s a quote from hardwater.org:

    "Bathing with soap in hard water leaves a film of
    sticky soap curd on the skin. The film may prevent
    removal of soil and bacteria. Soap curd interferes
    with the return of skin to its normal, slightly acid
    condition, and may lead to irritation."

    Here’s a quote from another site:

    "Soap scum is difficult to remove and stays on your
    skin after bathing or showering. It clogs skin pores
    and coats hair. This residue may be a breeding ground
    for bacteria, and could cause diaper rash, rough, red
    hands, skin irritation and skin discomfort."

    Sounds like we’re onto something here? But wait…now
    for the maddening part…the only place I’m finding
    this info is on sites that sell water softening
    systems. Still, it does make sense. I’m going to keep
    researching.

  15. Blair Blair Says:

    Sandra, now you got me confused though, becasue I thought it was the hotel
    with soft water that you couldn’t get the soap off of you? What do you
    think?

  16. Lucas Shea Says:

    I know, it seems a little odd to me too. All of the
    sites I have visited claim that soft water is actually
    getting the soap off of your skin, it just FEELS like
    it isn’t because you are used to the feeling of the
    hard water scum on your skin, so you just think the
    soap is still there. I am totally not buying that –
    the soap is really still there. With the hard water,
    though, it isn’t just leaving soap residue, it is
    leaving "soap curd" - the resulting scum when soap
    reacts with the calcium and magnesium in the hard
    water. I found a scientific site that goes into the
    science of what is actually happening in this
    reaction, and it seems legit. What I am thinking at
    this point is this: the soap residue left on the skin
    when soft water fails to rinse it completely doesn’t

    irritate the skin, but the scum created by the
    reaction of the soap with the hard water could be
    locking in bacteria or just providing a "sealed" layer
    on top of the skin that traps the oil and gives the
    fungus a nice little breeding ground. Just a
    theory…

  17. Blair Blair Says:

    OK, I think I understand this now and is a very interesting theory. But if
    it holds true, I think it may possibly have to do with the water itself and
    not necessarily with the soap we use. For me, I never,ever use any soap on
    my face and I barely get it wet in the shower (impossible to stay completely
    dry with the spray and such) but I do continue to use topicals like nizoral
    and desowen and cutanix and others.

    So, I suppose an add on theory would be that is the reaction between the
    hard water and ANY thing we have on face that could lead to this "curd" or
    maybe even the hard water alone when it just touches the skin, even in the
    absence of any soap or cream or lotion, causes some kind of chemical
    reaction and leaves this "curd" which then leads to irritation.

    Now, the hard part about testing this at home is that water softeners cost
    alot of money to have installed so what do we do–I just need to win the

    lottery and be done with all of this!

  18. Lucas Shea Says:

    I think you are right, it may be the water itself.
    The tile in my swimming pool, where there is obviously
    no soap used, has a big problem with calcification –
    the calcium and magnesium buildup on the tile is so
    bad we can hardly keep up with it with our cleaners
    and pumice stones. Here’s another reason this whole
    hard water theory is very interesting to me. Two
    years ago when my husband and I bought and moved into
    this house, my sebderm got a lot worse, and has
    remained so. I chalked it up to coincidence, but have
    always been on the lookout for a real reason. I never
    connected the two circumstances before this, but we
    have been blown away by the hard water we have in this
    house. I have never had such hard water! We have to
    clean our faucets with CLR regularly or they won’t

    turn off completely because of the calcification! If
    we accidentally splash water on a counter and leave
    it, it leaves a white mark around its perimeter as it
    dries that we have to remove with CLR! And lastly, we
    have a glass dining room table, and I usually keep
    fresh flowers on it. If I drip any water on the
    table, when it dries it leaves that same type of mark
    on the glass! It is so hard! I just can’t help but
    think that my bad sebderm and this hard water might be
    related!

    As for the expense, I have talked to my husband and we
    agree that it is worthwhile even if it is a bit
    pricey. I will keep everyone posted on the results,
    because I intend to give it a try. If it alleviates
    this annoying and painful condition, it is definitely
    worth a few hundred dollars to me! If it doesn’t,
    then none of you will have to fork out the dough to
    find out :) Of course, winning the lottery would make
    it easier! What I would like to know it this: DOES
    ANYONE ON THIS LIST HAVE SOFT WATER?

  19. Neva Marjory Says:

    — In sebderm@y…, "ralph jackson" <rj561@h…> wrote:
    > OK, I think I understand this now and is a very interesting theory.

    (snip)

    > Now, the hard part about testing this at home is that water
    softeners cost
    > alot of money to have installed so what do we do–I just need to win
    the
    > lottery and be done with all of this!

    For less than a dollar you can buy a gallon of distilled water at the
    grocery store and wash your face or what ever part of your body you
    want to test the hard water idea on. Use a lot less soap than you
    normally would, because it will foam like crazy in perfectly soft

    water. Heat a quart or so at a time in the microwave to take the
    chill off. Let us know what you find out. This is a lot cheaper than
    buying a softener just to find out if it does anything for you.

  20. Odessa Estrella Says:

    Ralph, I didn’t write about diet, Sandra did.

  21. Adolph Trudie Says:

    yes my face to is red after shower, thats why i take at night

    tony

  22. Lucas Shea Says:

    I’m not sure if you are asking me or Neil — it
    doesn’t affect my sebderm.

    Sandra

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.