Apple Cider Vinegar for Seborrheic Keratosis

Apple Cider Vinegar
Posted by Dd (Olympia, Wa) on 10/26/2015
★★★★☆

I have a compromised immune system and started breaking out with Seborrheic Keratosis when I was about 55. I am now 64 and they have spread on my back, neck, face edge, few on back of legs, under eyes on cheekbone and forehead, few on upper arms. The only thing that has helped them so far is Apple Cider Vinegar, which I now spread on the affected areas right after I bathe or shower. Then I let it air dry. What this has done is keep it controlled, many have shrunk. Less spreading now, thank goodness. I wonder if we did treat internal fungus if it would help. I know I have issues with Candidiasis and have ate too much sugar in my life. Wish more testing was done, instead of just labeling it an old person disease and "tough luck." I wonder if it is an accumulation of too much sugar in the diet and it has finally gone cellular? Needs further studies.


Apple Cider Vinegar
Posted by Erin (Tampa, Fl Usa) on 06/28/2011
★★★★☆

I read on a message board that some other people had great success using ACV on their lesions. They used full strength ACV soaked into a cotton ball and held onto the lesions with bandaids, and said that their lesions fell off in two days. I tried it myself using ACV with the mother still in it. My lesions flattened out considerably, and both scabbed and partially fell off in three days, but the entire lesion didn't fall off on either site. A second treatment might finish the job. One thing to be aware of if you try this is that you have to be highly tolerant of the smell of vinegar, because it will not dissipate when it's held onto your skin in this way.