What Causes Body Odor?

Body odor can be embarrassing and hard to remove from clothes, shoes, and sports equipment. While it’s clear that sweating leads to odor, did you know sweat itself is nearly odor-free? The cause of that post-workout smell is a little more complex.

Odor Remover - OdorBalance

Sweat Glands

There are two types of sweat glands: eccrine and apocrine. Eccrine glands can be found all over the body, while apocrine glands are clustered in areas dense with hair follicles, like the scalp, armpits, and groin. While eccrine glands open directly onto the surface of your skin, apocrine glands release sweat under the skin, in the hair follicle. The sweat produced by eccrine glands is primarily salt, water, and electrolytes, and is simply a response to overheating. In contrast, apocrine glands produce fatty sweat under stress.

Bacteria

When sweat reaches the surface of your skin, bacteria begins to break it down. The bacterial breakdown of apocrine sweat is the most common cause for what is known as body odor.

Physical and Emotional Triggers

Healthy people sweat in varying amounts. Sweating is a cooling mechanism that can be triggered by exercise, hot environments, and emotional responses to anxiety, stress, or nervousness. Hormones can also play a role in the frequency and amount of sweating; the nature of the body odor produced by an individual is affected by age, diet, gender, and a variety of other factors.

Medical Conditions

Certain medical conditions, such as an overactive thyroid or low blood sugar, can lead to excessive sweating. If you feel you sweat an excessive amount for no apparent reason or your sweating disrupts your daily life, you may want to visit a doctor.

If you or your sports apparel often smells of body odor, check out the OdorBalance line of products. Our system fights odor-causing bacteria in shoes, clothes, and sports equipment. Call us today to learn more at (410) 975-5367!

Eliminate Body Odor For Good

Here’s an interesting article from the popular online men’s resource AskMen.com. It talks about the science behind sweat as well as various ways to deal with body odor.

There’s one important thing missing, though. For all the care you can take to eliminate odor from your body, your clothes can still smell awful if they’re not properly maintained, and all that’s mentioned is to wash them. That definitely helps, but sometimes it won’t completely get rid of the smell. And you can’t throw a helmet in a washer.

OdorBalance fills in that part of the equation. If you’re looking for a way to completely restore your clothing, equipment, and footwear and then protect it from future stink problems, OdorBalance is the answer. Restore, Protect and Maintain with odor protection that lasts. Attack the source of the stench in your sports apparel, gear, or footwear that keeps your family, friends and teammates at a distance. Use our complete odor management and cleaning system to eliminate sports odor.

Eliminate Body Odor For Good

Have you ever had one of those days on the bus or the elevator, where you had some stinky guy’s armpit in your face? If you have, then you know that some men can generate a stench that can send a skunk running. Why do some guys have such strong body odor?

what’s that stench?

Body odor is a combination of sweat and bacteria. Sweat is actually odorless; it is bacteria that live off perspiration on our body that create the bad smell.

Humans generate apocrine and eccrine sweat. Eccrine sweat is used to lower our temperature, like when we exercise or when it’s really hot. It is produced uniformly all over the body and does not smell.

Apocrine is a special type of exudation that is produced in places like the armpits, groin, hands, and feet. It is the latter that causes all the trouble, but like eccrine sweat, it also doesn’t smell. Apocrine perspiration simply contains fat and protein.

So how does apocrine sweat tend to make us stinky?

Some bacteria on our body feed off apocrine sweat. Once they consume the sweat, they do what any living creature on earth does: they defecate Yup, you guessed it; B.O. is the smell of bacteria excrement!

Actually, bacteria don’t really defecate like we do — they break down chemical bonds — but they do consume our perspiration, and that makes us smell.

why do you have body odor?

Hygiene
The main reason why people stink is that some don’t bathe enough! But good hygiene doesn’t stop at washing your body; it also includes washing clothes. Certain fabrics, like cotton, easily absorb bad odors.

An overactive bacterial fauna on the skin is also a possible cause of B.O. Some people have more bacteria on them, others less, but again, it all comes down to good hygiene.

Sweating
Some people smell a lot because they perspire more, either because of stress, physical activity or because of a condition known as Hyperhidrosis, which causes excessive sweating.

Stress is more prevalent today. There are higher expectations, tighter schedules, more work, etc., and they all cause an unnatural amount of anxiety on the body, which causes perspiration and, in turn, may make us smell.

Young children do not smell because they don’t secrete apocrine sweat, so bacteria have nothing to interact with. People begin to produce apocrine when testosterone levels increase at puberty.

Diet
Eating certain foods can also affect how you smell. If a food is poignant enough, its smell can make it all the way through your body and come out from your pores. Garlic, cumin and curry are believed to have such properties.

Zinc deficiency can impart B.O. because it regulates detoxification in the body; it controls how the body handles waste. Likewise, a sugar imbalance and caffeine can alter the amount and type of perspiration.

Health problems
Some odors may indicate health problems. People who smell like nail polish can have diabetes and an ammonia smell is a sign of liver disease.

Why do men tend to smell more often than women?

men tend to smell stronger

One of the reasons some men smell more might be because they have higher testosterone levels — testosterone influences apocrine sweat production. Then again, some guys stink simply by virtue of poor hygiene. We all know how clean women are, so compared to them, many guys don’t bathe enough (hey, it’s all relative, right?).

Middle-aged men produce a substance called noneal, which adds to the production of bad odors, but women produce just as much of it, so again, it comes down to hygiene.

Men are slobs by nature; they have a tendency to wear clothes that haven’t been washed for a while. Yes, washing clothes is very important when it comes to odor. It doesn’t matter if your body is clean; if you wear clothes soaked in B.O., you will smell like B.O.

Another reason men tend to stink more might be due to the fact that they are more physical. Women tend to live more placid lifestyles — female construction workers and movers are still quite rare.

Furthermore, women aren’t as into sports as men. Athletic men tend to perspire more because pores get bigger with use, so guys who workout a lot are more prone to have B.O. Physical activity causes perspiration and by now you know the gruesome process…

treating body odor

Bathe more
Bathing is a good way to start, and washing your clothes also helps. Showers are better at preventing B.O. than baths because during a shower, more dirt and bacteria run off the body with the constant flow of water.

Blaming a B.O. problem on a more active bacterial fauna on your body is oversimplifying things. Just shower more and you will have fewer critters running around on you.

Deodorants/antiperspirants
Many deodorants only mask body odor, but some products actually fight bacteria. The most effective deodorants contain aluminum or zinc. Both elements are known to fight odor-causing bacteria.

Antiperspirants, on the other hand, clog sweat glands, so bacteria have nothing to interact with. Antibacterial soaps also help kill off those nasty pests.

Proper nutrition
Cutting down on caffeine reduces B.O. Coffee, cola, chocolate, and other caffeine aliments contribute to odor because they stimulate apocrine sweat glands (you know… that fatty sweat that bacteria love to munch on).

Drinking plenty of fluids keeps eccrine sweat glands active; this dilutes apocrine perspiration, which reduces body odor.

Boric acid
One of the best products for treating body odor, and quite possibly the least known, is Boric Acid. It’s relatively cheap and works great. Simply apply it wherever you want to keep smell away after taking a bath. Boric Acid will slow down the spreading of bacteria. Using too much, however, can irritate the skin.

Other treatments
If the odor doesn’t want to go away, there are products that can treat serious cases of body odor, but they require a prescription. Keep in mind that extreme cases of B.O. are probably caused by some form of fungal infection. If perspiration is out of control, there is a treatment called iontophoresis that can seal off sweat pores for a few months using electricity.

hook, line and stinker

If you stink, don’t worry; there are plenty of ways of dealing with the problem. It seems that the issue here is less a question of gender, and more about the knowledge and will to carry out the solutions. Find out what’s causing your body odor and deal with it accordingly, and don’t be afraid to see a doctor if a stench just doesn’t want to go away. Now go and fight those nasties!

Read more: http://www.askmen.com/sports/health/43b_mens_health.html#ixzz1nDj1oKiv

NPR Science: How Much Heat Can You Take?

Many people spend their lives trying to avoid sweating. However, as this video demonstrates, sweating is the mechanism that allows humans to withstand incredibly high heats.

NPR Science: How Much Heat Can You Take?

The speaker in this video does an excellent job of explaining the merits of sweat.  The video itself is an explanation of an experiment that took place more than two hundred years ago: A scientist of the time wanted to see exactly how much heat human beings could endure.  He recruited a group of volunteers and then put them in a room that was heated to 210 degrees Fahrenheit.  These men were able to withstand the heat thanks to the power of sweating.

As important as sweating is, the odors that can come with it are irritating and embarrassing. That’s why OdorBalance provides athletic smell removers. For more information, call (410) 975-5367 today.