By the time I found LeStrova, I already knew more about underboob rash than I ever wanted to know.
I knew how to dry beneath each breast with a hair dryer after showering.
I knew which powder stayed dry the longest and which one turned into paste by lunchtime.
I knew how to fold a bra liner so it would not show through my shirt.
I knew how long Lotrimin usually took to calm the redness.
And I knew exactly how many days it would take for the same patch to come back.
Three doctors had treated it.
The first gave me an antifungal cream.
The second prescribed something stronger.
The third told me to keep the area dry, wear lighter fabrics, and avoid anything that caused friction.
I followed every instruction.
The rash still returned to the same place.
Every time.
By then, I had stopped believing another product could help me.
I thought this was simply what happened when you had larger breasts.
Heat collected beneath them.
Sweat stayed trapped inside the fold.
Bras rubbed against the same tender strip of skin.
Maybe this was just my body.
Maybe there was nothing left to fix.
What the Creams Kept Missing
Then I learned something that changed how I understood every failed treatment.
The red, itchy skin I could see was not the whole problem.
It was the visible part.
Beneath that recurring irritation, the fungal colony could remain alive after the surface appeared calmer.
That explained why a cream could make the redness look better without stopping the same patch from returning.
The cream treated what I could see.
It did not fully reach what kept growing it back.
That was why the relief never lasted.
It was also why using a stronger version of the same approach never changed the outcome.
The doctors had not ignored me.
They had simply kept treating the visible redness.
The rooted colony underneath was the part that kept getting missed.
Why I Decided to Try LeStrova
LeStrova was not presented as a stronger cream.
It was a naturopath-formulated antifungal soap designed around the part the creams had missed.
That mattered to me.
The formula uses tea tree oil first to help open the surface.
Then 10% lauric acid, the strongest ingredient in the formula, is designed to reach beneath that surface and target the fungal colony responsible for the recurring cycle.
Instead of adding another greasy layer beneath my bra, I could use it during the shower I was already taking.
No powder cloud across the bathroom.
No cream sitting wet beneath my breasts.
No midday application in a work bathroom.
I would lather it beneath each breast, leave it on for 8 to 10 minutes, rinse thoroughly, and dry the area completely.
That was the entire routine.
I had already reorganized my life around this rash.
LeStrova did not ask me to build another complicated system.