News

How tear-ible! Over 20 million Americans have dry eye disease, which means that their eyes don’t produce enough tears or ...
Demodex mites are tiny eight-legged parasites that mostly live in the hair follicles and oil glands on your face, especially around your eyelashes, cheeks, forehead and nose. They feed on dead skin ...
Researchers have long questioned whether the microscopic Demodex mite is a cause or effect of rosacea, a skin condition affecting 16 million Americans. Now, evidence suggests Demodex may play a ...
Demodex are mites that live in the hair follicles and oil glands of many mammals. There are two species found in humans - one which lives mainly in hair follicles on our faces and the other which can ...
YOUR skincare routine could be attracting microscopic creatures that have sex on your face, an expert has warned. Tiny mites, known as Demodex, feed, mate and lay eggs in the oily folds of the skin… ...
To determine whether demodex mites are the cause of skin irritations, dermatologists can tape or lightly scrape the top layer of skin and place the sample under a microscope, Ricardo-Gonzalez said.
A dermatologist has shared a video about the eight-legged mites called Demodex that live in our pores, which viewers have found either alarming or insightful.
Invisible skin mites called Demodex almost certainly live on your face – but what about your mascara? After DNA analysis, researchers found signs of Demodex on 100% of the adult humans they tested.
If you are reading this, you are probably not alone. Most people on Earth are habitats for mites that spend the majority of their brief lives burrowed, head-first, in our hair follicles, primarily ...
To determine whether demodex mites are the cause of skin irritations, dermatologists can tape or lightly scrape the top layer of skin and place the sample under a microscope, Ricardo-Gonzalez said.
To determine whether demodex mites are the cause of skin irritations, dermatologists can tape or lightly scrape the top layer of skin and place the sample under a microscope, Ricardo-Gonzalez said.
To determine whether demodex mites are the cause of skin irritations, dermatologists can tape or lightly scrape the top layer of skin and place the sample under a microscope, Ricardo-Gonzalez said.