the importance of the acid mantle and microbiome of your skin

The Importance of the Acid Mantle & Microbiome of your Skin

by Oct 2, 20240 comments

In the noise of the world of skincare, all we hear about is moisturizers, serums, and SPF. But there is one key player in your skin’s health that doesn’t get enough attention—the acid mantle. This invisible, yet vital layer, together with your skin’s microbiome, is essential for keeping your skin balanced, protected, and glowing. No matter what a skincare product promises you – the most important attribute is that it protects these two players – because when they are in good health – you have beautiful glowing skin – if they are not – your skin becomes sensitive, irritated, and uneven – not to mention acne flourishes, eczema becomes worse alongside dermatitis and psoriasis.

 

What is the Acid Mantle?

 

Think of your acid mantle as your skin’s protective shield—a thin, slightly acidic film on the surface of the skin. Its primary role is to defend your skin against harmful environmental aggressors like pollution, bacteria, and fungi, while maintaining moisture balance.

 

It is composed of sebum (the oil your skin produces), sweat, and dead skin cells. The acid mantle creates a protective barrier over all of your skin (not just your face, but also your body) with a pH level of about 4.5 to 5.5, the ideal level for healthy skin function.

 

Why is the Acid Mantle Important?

 

This acidic environment is unbelievably essential for healthy skin. Here’s why:

 

  1. Protects Against Harmful Microbes
    The slightly acidic nature of the acid mantle helps prevent the growth of harmful bacteria and fungi that thrive in more alkaline environments (think soap, foaming cleanser). Without this acidic layer, your skin becomes more vulnerable to infections, acne breakouts, and irritation.
  2. Maintaining Skin Hydration
    A healthy well-functioning acid mantle locks moisture into the skin, keeping the skin looking glowing and plump as well as preventing moisture from evaporating. When the acid mantle is compromised, your skin becomes dry, flaky, and prone to sensitivity – or it becomes oily because the oil glands start to work overtime to restore the acid mantle.
  3. Barrier Repair & Healing
    When your skin is damaged—whether by cuts, acne, or environmental factors—your acid mantle works to heal and repair the damage. It speeds up the recovery process by keeping moisture in and harmful agents out.

 

What Can Damage the Acid Mantle?

 

Even though the acid mantle is a strong protector, it’s surprisingly easy to disrupt. Some common culprits include:

  • Foaming Cleansers, Glycolic Cleansers and Gel Cleansers
    Many popular cleansers are too alkaline and strip the skin of its natural oils, leaving it vulnerable. Over-washing or scrubbing too hard with a scrubbing brush can also damage this delicate barrier.
  • Chemical Exfoliants & Aggressive Treatments
    While chemical exfoliants like AHAs and BHAs can be great for skin renewal, overuse can weaken the acid mantle, leading to sensitivity and redness – the worst offenders being glycolic acid, salicylic acid and mandelic acid. Another offender is Retinol and other vitamin A treatments. Lactic Acid is the only safe AHA that doesn’t disrupt the acid mantle.
  • Environmental Stressors
    Pollution and extreme weather conditions can all negatively impact the acid mantle, causing your skin to become inflamed or dry.

 

Enter the Microbiome: Your Skin’s Friendly Bacteria

 

The acid mantle doesn’t work alone—it is in constant collaboration with another key player: the skins microbiome. The microbiome is a community of trillions of microorganisms, including bacteria, fungi, and viruses, that live on your skin’s surface. And believe it or not, they’re your skin’s best friends.

 

The acid mantle and microbiome work closely together – they need each other to function at their best. This is how they do it:

  • Microbiome and Protection
    The microbiome thrives in the slightly acidic environment created by the acid mantle. When treated lovingly or left alone -this balanced ecosystem helps prevent harmful bacteria from overpopulating the skin and causing infections, breakouts, or conditions like eczema. When your microbiome is in harmony, it can fight off bad bacteria that might otherwise take advantage of a damaged acid mantle.
  • Immune System Support
    Your skin’s microbiome is an essential part of your immune system. It works as a first line of defence, communicating with immune cells to help manage inflammation and repair damage more effectively.
  • Skin Barrier Function
    A balanced microbiome also plays a role in reinforcing the skin barrier, ensuring that the acid mantle functions properly. This synergy between the microbiome and the acid mantle keeps your skin hydrated, resilient, and glowing.

 

How to Protect Your Acid Mantle and Skin’s Microbiome

 

Maintaining the balance between the acid mantle and your microbiome is easy enough to do – all it takes is using gentler, and less aggressive care of the skin. Here’s how you can nurture them:

 

  1. Use Oil Cleansers Or Cream pH- Balanced Cleansers
    Look for gentle, oil cleansers such as the
    Everything Skin Oil or pH-balanced cream cleansers that respect the skin’s natural acidity. Avoid products with harsh chemicals or alkaline ingredients that can strip your skin such as any foaming cleansers, gel cleansers, or exfoliating cleansers including glycolic cleansers or other AHA cleansers.
  2. Limit Exfoliation
    Exfoliation is great for removing dead skin cells and keeping your skin smooth, but moderation is key. If using an AHA or Retinol or physical scrub – only use them 2-3 times per week – more is detrimental. Over-exfoliating can weaken the acid mantle and disturb your microbiome. Ensure your physical scrub also hydrates your skin and doesn’t contain harsh abrasive grains such as the Everything Skin Scrub
  3. Support Your Microbiome with Prebiotics and Probiotics
    Consider incorporating skincare products that contain prebiotics (which feed the good bacteria on your skin) and probiotics (live bacteria) to help balance your microbiome. Ingredients like fermented extracts, yogurt, and certain algae are excellent for promoting a healthy skin environment. Certain ingredients in balm based creams (those that do not contain water) such as the
    Everything Skin Cream – help nourish and protect the microbiome if they contain ingredients such as organic calendula cream,organic rosehip oil  and organic jojoba oil.
  4. Avoid Over-Cleansing
    Stick to cleansing your face no more than twice a day. Over-cleansing can disrupt your acid mantle and lead to dryness or irritation – avoid
    facial cleansing wipes at all costs – they are full of microbiome killing ingredients.
  5. Moisturize Correctly
    A healthy acid mantle needs moisture to function. Unfortunately most moisturisers contain 70 percent water and only 30 percent hydrating properties – you need to apply a product that leaves a protective film over the skin to keep the skin functioning at its best such as the
    Everything Skin Cream
  6. Manage How Much Sunscreen You Use
    Sun in moderation is extremely good for improving your skin’s health – sunlight before 10 am and after 3 pm will help the microbiome to become healthy and for the acid mantle to repair itself.
    Sunscreen although it has its place in everyone’s beauty routine, will often suffocate the microbiome or dry out the skin’s acid mantle. Unless you are going out into the sunshine between 10am – 3pm you should not wear sunscreen at all. If you are heading out into the sunshine between those hours – that is when you need to apply sunscreen as it only protects the skin for approximately up to 2 hours depending on your skin colour and sensitivity to sunlight.
  7. Healthy Lifestyle Habits
    Your skin’s health is heavily influenced by your diet, stress levels, and sleep. Eating a balanced diet rich in greens, omegas and antioxidants, staying hydrated, sleeping at least 8 hours per night (women need more sleep than their male counter parts, and usually need 9 – 10 hours) and managing stress can all support the health of your acid mantle and microbiome.

 

In Conclusion: Honor Your Skin’s Invisible Guardians

Many skincare therapists, and dermatologists believe in stripping the skin to deal with multiple skin issues, but there is a growing movement where more and more specialists in the skin industry are joining the ranks of the holistic skin therapists agreeing that protecting the acid mantle and nourishing the microbiome are the MOST important steps, we can take towards improving our skin’s health.

 

By now understanding the roles they play in keeping your skin healthy and functioning at it’s best you can take steps to protect and nourish your skin ensuring that it  stays strong and glowing for years to come.

 

If you need more help choosing the correct steps to help you achieve glowing skin, a healthy gut and calm mental health – book a glowing skin and wellness consultation via zoom with me!

Or subscribe in the link below to receive weekly beauty and health information and tips!

Yvette xx

Thank you for reading my blog!

Hi! 

I am Yvette van Schie, I am a holistic beauty therapist, skin nutritionist, skincare developer and makeup artist. I am passionate about sharing real beauty advice with a whack of reality.

For over 30 years I have worked with the best in the beauty and health industry as a trainer, educator  and product formulator and I still do – so my knowledge is diverse – I am not blinkered when sharing my information with you because everyone I speak to shares what they know, and I turn it into easy to digest information because I want my readers to feel empowered to make their own decisions and to feel that they are fully in control of their beauty and well being.

 

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