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  • Hey guys! One of the biggest problems you hear foreigners talk about in Japan is their

  • lack of a deodorant selection. There are all kinds of rumors about why Japanese people

  • don't have as much body odor as us stinky foreigners. You'll hear that it's because

  • we foreigners don't clean ourselves, unlike Japanese people who often take a full bath

  • every single night. You'll hear that it's because of our diet and our love of dairy

  • and meat products. Or you'll hear that it's because Japan is a magical land where when

  • you step off of the airplane, suddenly you don't need to wear deodorant anymore.

  • But like most mysterious questions, the actual answer lies in SCIENCE. To understand this,

  • you need to know where body odor comes from. We have two primary types of sweat glands.

  • Eccrine and apocrine. Eccrine sweat glands are small and found almost everywhere on the

  • body. As you can see from this picture, they go directly from underneath your skin, to

  • your skin's surface. They secrete a mixture of water and salt, and this is used to cool

  • down your body. But then we have apocrine sweat glands. And

  • these are the glands that cause body odor. These glands are larger and are only found

  • in certain areas of the body, primarily your underarms and pubic region. Instead of secreting

  • directly onto your skin, they secrete into a hair follicle, which then carries the sweat

  • up onto your skin. And these glands secrete primarily proteins, lipids (which are things

  • like fatty acids), and steroids. By itself, this sweat does not smell. However, it IS

  • a delicious and desirable substance for the bacteria that live on our skin. Bacteria feed

  • off of this sweat, metabolize it, and then their waste products are what smell. So, body

  • odor essentially comes from bacteria poop. This is also why if you want to prevent body

  • odor, you should be looking for a deodorant that makes your underarms an inhospitable

  • place for bacteria to live. Different bacteria and the different enzymes

  • they use to break down our sweat produce different smells, which is why different people have

  • different body odors. So then what makes Japanese people have less

  • body odor? Genetically, they have fewer of these apocrine sweat glands. Why? That's not

  • fair? How does that happen? Why do I have to be more smelly? It all comes from one specific

  • gene: ABCC11. There are two variations of this gene. One with the allele A, and one

  • with the allele G. People born with the G allele have more active apocrine sweat glands.

  • Whereas peopleborn with the A allele have fewer active apocrine sweat glands, and little

  • to no body odor. The smelly allele G appears to be the original version of the gene, whereas

  • the non-smelly allele A appears to have emerged approximately 2,000 generations ago.

  • Why did the A allele appear? We don't really know, but we think it might have something

  • to do with colder climates. Here you can see a chart of what percentage

  • of different races have which allele. So most of us who are African, Latin American, European,

  • or Pacific Islander have the smelly version of the gene. However, only about a quarter

  • of Japanese people, less than 10% of Chinese people, and pretty much no Koreans have the

  • smelly version of the gene. But, there's more to this gene than just whether

  • you produce body odor or not. There's a type of apocrine gland in your ear canal that produces

  • ear wax. As many of you may have heard, Japanese people typically have something called dry

  • earwax, which is flaky, unlike our earwax, which is wet and goopy. The type of earwax

  • you have is also determined by the version of gene ABCC11 that you have. So, if you have

  • the G allele version, you will have wet earwax, and if you have the A allele version, you

  • will produce dry earwax. So that is a very quick way to check which version of this gene

  • you have, and whether or not you're likely to have much body odor.

  • In conclusion this is why most Japanese people don't smell as much and why they don't have

  • as large a variety of deodorant as we have. So, just because you move to Japan, that doesn't

  • mean you can magically stop using deodorant. I have a video coming up soon where I will

  • show you different types of Japanese deodorants, and which ones work best for us smelly foreigners.

  • Thanks for watching guys! I'll see you later.

Hey guys! One of the biggest problems you hear foreigners talk about in Japan is their

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日本人はなぜ臭わないのか!? (Why Japanese don't smell!)

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    gotony5614.me97 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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