What’s with all the itching in winter?

What’s with all the itching in winter?

Autumn Winds.

The skin is visible.

No more water spirits.

It’s starting to tickle in mysterious ways.

I can’t scratch it, I can’t scratch it, I can’t scratch it, I can scratch it, I can’t scratch it. It’s scratched.

What’s even more disturbing is that this disturbing state of affairs will last almost the entire autumn and winter.

Today, we would like to follow the presentation by Director Zhang Zhang of the dermatology section of the Second People ‘ s Hospital in Shandong Province to see why the skin will be itching in the autumn winter and how it will be itching.

In the fall and winter, why does the skin tickle?

Leather glands live below the surface of the skin, which is a neighbour, with the former excreting the skin and the latter growing hair and then coming out through the same catheter. The combination is a little bit like a reverse, less regulated y font, which is a pores-up common export.

So, you know, fur holes, in addition to sweating hair, will also come out of leather. The piping glands are moderately working to produce a suitable amount of leather, sowing skin and hair (which is also the reason for the soft fur of animals); and “mix” with sweat, forming a protective membrane that helps the skin to lock water.

However, as a result of the fall wind, which is low-temperature, leather is not only reduced, but also in a somewhat condensed form, with some effort to remove it from the catheter, which leads to a “insufficiency of memory” of the leather that can come out.

If the “owow-weed” skin is not warmed in time, if the cold sweats less, the skin becomes dryer and the aching symptoms appear. In particular, a “hard-hit area” of the calves was used to create a large “self-harm” site. For older persons, metabolic functions are gradually declining, pelvic glands are less dynamic and external hypothermia and dry stimulation is more likely to cause skin itching.

Females are less dynamic than males, with the advantage that they are less likely to experience skin problems, such as large pores, rough skins and scabies, and that they are more affected by autumn and winter festivals.

From a geographical point of view, the air in the north is clearly dry and rough, without the wetness of the air in the south, so that the “shocks” on the skin of the North are more intense.

Combined with the introduction of hot air-conditioning or heating, the absorption of part of the water in the air can increase skin itching.

If itching is more severe and intolerable, then it is no longer necessary to go to the dermal section of the regular health-care facility to see a doctor who, under the direction of the doctor, can help with the accelerants, itches, etc.