Body odor
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
ICD-10 | L75.0 |
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ICD-9 | 705.89 |
Bromhidrosis or body odor (also called bromidrosis, osmidrosis and ozochrotia) is the smell of bacteria growing on the body. These bacteria multiply considerably in the presence of sweat, but sweat itself is almost totally odorless. Body odor is associated with the hair, feet, groin (upper medial thigh), anus, skin in general, armpits, genitals, pubic hair, and mouth.
Body odor is specific to the individual, and can be used to identify people, though this is more often done by dogs than by humans. An individual's bodily odor is also influenced by diet, gender, genetics, health, medication, occupation, and mood.[citation needed]
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[edit] Social history
Many people find the odor of Corynebacterium tenuis and C. xerosis in the apocrine sweat of the underarms particularly offensive. It is possible to mask odors, using perfume, cologne, antiperspirants, and deodorants. This disease has no cure as of yet, and many perfumes may not help covering the odor but increase sensitisation. Antiperspirants stop the sweat, while deodorants kill or inhibit the offending bacteria.[citation needed] Some individuals find underarm perspiration uncomfortable (or visually offensive if it becomes noticeable on clothing), and use antiperspirants to counter this. Others refrain from using antiperspirants, sometimes due to viewing perspiration as a natural bodily function that should not be hindered, and sometimes due to naturally low levels of perspiration that can be comfortably managed without antiperspirants. Individuals who choose not to use antiperspirants may or may not choose to use non-antiperspirant deodorants, according to personal preference. An additional way to reduce odor is to remove some or all of the underarm hair.
Some cultures, such as those in East Asia, and Hindus have long placed an emphasis on daily bathing. In Europe, during the Middle Ages, bathing was discouraged by the Catholic Church as it was a "pagan" custom and often involved communal bathing and public nudity.[citation needed] Being clean was associated with catching diseases as body filth was thought to provide a protective layer against "vapors". Most Europeans at that time bathed only once or twice yearly.[citation needed]. Queen Elizabeth I of England was known to take a bath every three months, whether she needed one or not. Daily bathing has no great effect on Bromhidrosis, in fact in having this disorder the odor is emitted constantly.
Since body odor often differs between cultures (because diet and hygiene differ between cultures), and because people find unfamiliar body odors to be disagreeable, body odor has long been used by societies to look down on others. 17th century Japanese encountering Europeans for the first time found their odor particularly strong and likened it to the smell of rancid butter, and assigned the name bata-kusai (roughly meaning "stinks of butter") to visiting Europeans at the time. [1]
In the period 1910-1920, the American advertising industry initiated the now-familiar strategy of advertisements intended to foster anxiety about social status, and concern about personal deficiencies that could be remedied by buying the advertised product. In 1919, Odo-Ro-No became the first company to use the term "B.O." in an advertisement.[citation needed]
[edit] Genetics
Body odor is influenced by the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules. These are genetically determined and play an important role in immunity of the organism. The vomeronasal organ contains cells sensitive to MHC molecules in a genotype-specific way. Experiments on animals and volunteers shown the potential sexual partners tend to be perceived more attractive if their MHC composition is substantially different. This behavior pattern promotes variability of the immune system of individuals in the population, thus making the population more robust against new diseases.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- The Scientist - Immunity, smell linked, November 2004
- Male sweat boosts women's hormone levels -- from UC Berkeley, February 2007
- The Effect of Male Sweat on Women's Hormone Levels -- from Science Daily, February 2007