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Body Odour? No Sweat!

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There's nothing wrong with the
way your body smells. But sometimes, body odour can get quite foul. Go from
being Stinky Susan to Sweet-smelling Sunita with Femina's guide to underarm
troubles!
IT'S not a subject we find pleasant, but we all have body
odour (BO). Sure, personal hygiene can make for a good start to nip the problem.
But that alone cannot prevent either sweat or body odour.
And while
perfumes may mask the smell, that too, is not the answer to BO problems. BO is a
result of sweat combining with the bacteria present on your skin. So the only
way to tackle the problem is to reach for the nearest anti-perspirant
deo!
Deo Day
There's a
whole bunch of deo options you can choose from: Roll Ons, sprays, sticks and
even deo talcs. But while some of these are simply deodorants, others are
anti-perspirant deodorants. The latter variety has a two-pronged approach to
tackling BO. They reduce sweating and fight bacteria. Here are some other ways
you can tackle BO:
• Wash your clothes regularly. The same
bacteria from your skin can also live on sweaty clothes and keep the smell
alive.
• Dust with talcum powder or cornstarch after bathing.
These keep you drier and prevent bacteria from growing.
• Cut
your caffeine intake. Cola, coffee, tea, chocolate, and other foods and drinks
with caffeine make certain sweat glands more active.
• What
you eat can actually affect how you smell! You'll be less stinky if you eat
plenty of fruits and veggies. Drinking a lot of water will keep the eccrine
glands (sweat glands that only produce a fluid) active to dilute the scent.
• Use a fragrance family to layer the scents - bath gel, body
lotion, talc and deo from brands like Calvin Klein, Burberry, Nina Ricci and
Elizabeth Arden.
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Busting
Sweaty Myths
• Anti-perspirants stop you from sweating: No.
They only reduce sweating.
• Anti-perspirants trap toxins in
the body. No. Of all the sweat ducts across the human body, only a small
percentage of them are in the underarms. Reducing the flow of perspiration in
the underarms doesn't affect the body's ability to regulate temperature (which
is the purpose of sweating).
• Anti-perspirants cause breast
cancer. Contrary to some reports, there is no scientific or medical evidence to
suggest that using anti-perspirants causes breast cancer.
•
Sweat is foul-smelling. Sweat itself is odourless. It's the combo of bacteria
and sweat that triggers BO. Bacteria proliferate easily in the moist environs of
the underarm and feed on sweat.
• Sweating is unnatural. It's
perfectly natural. It's our body's way of maintaining the right
temperature.
• Humans sweat most at the armpits. An average
adult sweats close to a litre every day. The armpits release only six ml a day.
The underarms and the area down under seem to be sweaty all the time since these
spots are not exposed to air and trap bacteria easily.
•
Bathing regularly prevents BO. Bathing just maintains your personal hygiene and
delays BO. Your body is bound to sweat and combine with bacteria.
• Deos are just another kind of fragrance. Nope. Unlike
perfumes, soaps and plain talcum powders, deos fight the bacteria present on
your skin.
• Anti-perspirants and deodorants are the same.
Deos help control body odour by fighting the odour-causing bacteria as well as
by masking the odour caused by bacteria combining with sweat. Anti-perspirant
deos, reduce sweating, fight the bacteria - thereby fighting body odour on two
fronts.
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