What Is Eczema & How to Manage/Heal it

What Is Eczema & How to Manage/Heal it

If you Google what causes eczema? the typical answers describe an inflammatory skin condition, genetic in origin, primarily related to an abnormality in the skin. The answers seem to suggest that since it is genetic we are unable to change the root cause of the problem. Most people think of eczema as an isolated skin condition since it has an obvious presence on the skin.  I want to squash these notions right here and now. Eczema (AKA atopic dermatitis) is a systemic condition that starts in our guts and is the result of a runaway immune system.

Our bodies can only tolerate a given amount of inflammation, and once we exceed that threshold, we will see signs of the problem. We often see those sign on the skin, as our skin is a window into our immune system.  Although our guts are typically the major source of systemic inflammation, other factors such as stress, environment, household toxins, and topical creams and lotions are also contributing to our overall inflammatory level.

Holistically managing eczema means addressing all these areas to reduce our overall inflammatory load. We will begin with the gut as this is the single largest factor influencing our immune system. Remember, two-thirds of our immune system resides in our guts. So you need to start thinking of eczema as an inside out problem. Once we understand how the problem starts in our gut, we can then make the internal changes needed to heal our skin from the inside out. What gives me the right to make that statement? I have successfully treated thousands of eczema patients by healing their guts.

You Are Not Alone

If you or your child is suffering from eczema take solace in the notion that you are not alone. Incidence of eczema has increased 2- to 3-fold in industrialized nations since the 1970s, with approximately 15% to 20% of children and 1% to 3% of adults affected worldwide. Population-based studies in the United States suggest that prevalence is about 10.7% for children and 7.2% for adults. Non-hispanic black children are disproportionately affected with nearly 1 in 5 kids developing the disease.

Onset of disease commonly presents by 5 years of age, with the highest incidence occurring between the ages of 3 and 6 months, but it can occur at any age. Approximately 60% of patients develop disease in the first year of life and 90% within the first 5 years of life. 20% of children who develop eczema before 2 years of age will have persisting symptoms of disease well into adulthood (and this number is likely even higher).

If you live in the United States you are disproportionately affected by eczema.  Children born outside of the USA have a 50% less chance of developing eczema but that risk increases to match American born kids after 10 years. Additionally kids in urban areas are more commonly affected than their more rural counterparts.  And the disease does not differentiate by wealth – in fact children of parents with greater than high school education are also more commonly affected.  For reasons I will discuss later, the US is an eczema producing machine!

Ok – so now that I have bored you to death with numbers let talk about something a bit more exciting – eating and pooping.  To understand how eczema starts from the inside we need to understand a bit about human nutrition.  Human nutrition is broken down into five basic stages.

  • Ingestion
  • Digestion
  • Absorption
  • Assimilation
  • Elimination
  • Ingestion

Ingestion

Ingestion starts the process and begins as we place food into our mouths. As we begin to chew our salivary glands  produce saliva to help soften and chew our food. Our taste buds are activated to  appreciate flavors and the palatability of the food. This is where the American diet first starts to wreak havoc on us. The food industry has introduced chemicals into our food which put our taste buds into a state of bliss that nature has a tough time competing with.  Food scientists have figured out how to create these chemical compounds which our taste buds simply can’t resist. There’s a reason that those first few bites of  McDonalds or Doritos taste so darn wonderful. (If you are struggling with a picky eater read this blog post from Seven Layer Charlotte)

Digestion

As the food passes down the esophagus and into the stomach and intestines the digestion process begins. As the food is turned and churned in our bellies, the larger molecules are broken down into smaller molecules. Our cells understand a simple language I like to call the fruit and vegetable language. This language consists of familiar words like potassium, calcium, magnesium and other nutrients found in those foods. However, when the body encounters strange new chemicals that have been added in a lab, our cells are confused. They struggle to decipher food additives like monosodium glutamate or disodium-5′-inosinate. In addition, our bodies consider some of these substances as foreign invaders, and start an inflammatory reaction to fight the invaders. Gluten and dairy are two common culprits that push the body into defense mode.

I want to take a minute here and point out the fact that it is ridiculous we place something called a “nutrition label” and many of the foods we eat.  You are implying that there is nutritional value in many foods which are simply garbage.  Many of us are taught in school how to read aspects of food labels such as fiber, fat or sugar but few of us are educated on the actual ingredient list.  Thus we are bombarding our digestive system with loads of crap that the food industry has convinced us is “a nutritious part of our daily breakfast”!

Absorption

The food we eat provides the fuel for our body to make the cells which sustain us.  New skin cells are produced every 30 days, lung cells every 8 days, and gastrointestinal cells approximately every two days. To build these cells, our bodies require the vital nutrients that are found in fruits and vegetables. When we give our children breakfast cereal for example, we are supplying their cells with things like rice flour, canola oil, maltodextrin, trisodium phosphate, caramel color, and tertiary butylhydroquinone.  Some of these chemicals are actually known to damage the gut and lead to inflammatory reactions and food allergies.

This brings us to the next step in the human nutrition cycle: absorption.  As this slimy mass of squishy food particles enters our small intestine, the body is carefully evaluating and trying to break down each substance into something small and safe to enter our bloodstream.  A whole team of specialized cells line up like soldiers along our intestines to guard this process. These guards are known as enterocytes and in a healthy gut they look like the fella on the left in the figure below.  However, if they have been bombarded by enemy chemicals and molecules, they start to look like the guy on the right.

And just like a military defense, once the weak soldier can’t hold his ground, the wall is breached and the enemy enters allied territory.  As this process progresses, the entire gut can become “leaky” as more holes are breached through fallen soldier cells. The little guys above also like an acidic environment to work which is one of the reasons the use of antacid reflux medications increase the risk of eczema. The acidity also helps the body break down food.  When we disrupt the normal acidic environment, our cells can’t manage the molecules and leads to a leaky gut.

Steroids and antibiotics also result in a similar damage to cells which leads to a permeable or leaky barrier between our intestinal lining and our blood stream (See my post on B. Infantis Gut Bacteria for More Info). This results in large chemicals and molecules leaking into our bloodstream that the body sees as foreign and potentially dangerous.  (Excess sugar, also common in the American diet, leads to additional inflammatory molecules roaming our blood. Gluten and several other food proteins can also incite this inflammatory response.) An intense inflammatory reaction occurs which is our body’s way of mounting a defensive attack against invaders.

This inflammatory response is system wide.  And guess where a large number of inflammatory cells reside?  Yep, in our skin.  They lie in wait in our skin to protect against skin invasion, but get mobilized to help out due to the attack in our bellies.  The red itchy burning skin is simply the immune system performing like it should against the attack – except we as Americans have become ignorant to the fact that the attacking army is in our food.  Yes, the processed food and excess sugar are the proverbial trojan horse.

Hidden Chemicals in our Food are a Trojan Horse

And if we treat the problem with only topical creams or steroids, we temporarily block the immune response at the local level but have done nothing to address the underlying problem.  And once we stop those topicals, the body comes roaring back to its defenses with rebound flares of eczema which are often worse than the initial attack because the immune system has now been primed for the war.  Antibodies have been created which will now increase the response when the body sees that chemical again.

Assimilation

Now that the nutrients (and other stuff) has moved into the bloodstream our body can access it for maintenance and building. We call this assimilation. Now all the zinc inside that chickpea or nut is circulating through the blood and is taken up by skin cells to keep our skin happy and healthy. Without adequate amounts of those circulating nutrients, our cells whither and die. But they also suffer when the fuel is of poor quality.

The last step in our nutrition cycle is elimination – aka pooping.  Pooping everyday is the way our body detoxifies itself from unwanted chemicals or breakdown products.  When we poop too infrequently we have a buildup of toxins.  When we poop too much, we are likely eliminating valuable nutrients that haven’t had time to be absorbed. The fact is most people should poop everyday.

Today we looked at how gut health affects our overall immune system and inflammatory state. Keep in mind that many other factors influence how much inflammation our bodies carry including stress, environment, household toxins, and topical lotions and creams just to name a few. A holistic approach means addressing all these areas to alleviate inflammation and heal eczema. For a comprehensive approach to healing your eczema, check out my program below.

How to Heal

I could go on and on, but I have hopefully convinced you that eczema is a massive burden on individuals, families, and society. This is what inspired me to start my Eczema Transformation Program – a better way to heal eczema.

So where do we start? Simply starting all kids on medication that costs $5,000 per month is NOT THE ANSWER. Getting to the root cause of the disease is the answer. Reducing the massive inflammatory activity inside our children’s bodies is the answer. But not with pharmaceuticals and creams.

Heal the Gut

Two-thirds of our immune system resides in our gut. Thus, healing the gut is of paramount importance. For our gut to heal, a healthy microbiome must be established. Previous rounds of antibiotics and other meds devastate the good bacteria in our bellies. (This is why previous antibiotic use is closely associated with developing eczema). Gut healing is a combination of dietary changes, environmental changes, toxin removal, stress management, and correcting nutrient deficiencies. But this needs to be done in a systematic way. I have watched families nearly starve their children with excessive elimination diets.  Food replacement should be the focus rather than elimination.

Restore a Healthy Microbiome

Dietary changes need to happen before a healthy microbiome can be restored. Taking a probiotic while eating a diet high in sugar and processed foods is a waste of time – and bacteria. Similarly, starting a number of supplements at once can cause abdominal cramping, diarrhea, constipation, and a number of other complaints. And what supplements does one choose? What order? Supplements are not regulated and consumers pick and choose based on google reviews rather than scientific data.

Environment, Stress and the Skin

Environment plays a huge role in eczema. But what does one pick and choose for maximum effect? The skin microbiome plays a crucial role in skin irritation, itching, scratching and bleeding. This must be addressed as a part of the comprehensive healing solution. Let’s not forget stress, the most under-recognized toxin in our lives. The bottom line is – you need a roadmap to recovery. To find out more about my blueprint to start your skin journey, follow the link below.

The Eczema Transformation Program

So now you hopefully have an understanding of how the gut plays a vital role in the development of eczema. So to start the healing process in the skin, we must start from the inside – healing the gut.

In Good Health,
Dr Ana-Maria Temple

Thank you for reading!

This article of the Skinsider Scoop was graciously written by Holistic Pediatrician, Dr. Ana-Maria Temple and edited by the Clean Skin Club team. If you're interested in more from Dr. Ana-Maria, please shoot us an email, and follow her Instagram - @dranamariatemple