Blocked Armpit Pores Today
Maya was confused. "But I shower every day."
She assumed it was an allergy. She switched deodorant brands. No change. She scrubbed harder in the shower. Worse.
"You don't have an allergy," the doctor said. "You have blocked pores — specifically, miliaria and clogged hair follicles. You’ve essentially built up a layer of deodorant residue, dead skin, and sweat that can't escape." blocked armpit pores
Maya learned: Healthy armpits aren't bone-dry or heavily layered. They need gentle exfoliation, breathability, and occasional breaks from product.
Finally, she saw a dermatologist.
But one hot July, she noticed something odd. Her left armpit felt bumpy . Not painful, just… rough. When she looked closely, she saw tiny flesh-colored bumps. Her deodorant wasn't gliding on smoothly anymore. By afternoon, her armpit felt itchy and slightly sore.
The doctor explained: "Armpit skin is thin and folded. Many natural deodorants use baking soda, shea butter, or coconut oil — great ingredients, but they can cake up in the pores. Add tight shirts rubbing all day, and the sweat gets trapped under that layer. That’s why you’re bumpy and itchy — it’s not an infection, just a traffic jam." Maya was confused
Here’s a short, useful story to help understand and deal with . Title: The Armpit That Stopped Sweating (But Not Really)