What is the ideal routine to reduce blemishes and post-acne marks on the body?
To finally reduce blemishes and post-acne marks on the body, we recommend to:
1. Cleanse skin with DermoPure Triple Effect Cleansing Gel
2. Apply DermoPure Triple Effect Body Cream to the affected areas of your body
If you are looking for additional protection before leaving the house, apply Sun Body Oil Control Gel-Cream SPF 50.
For face usage we recommend to cleanse with DermoPure Triple Effect Cleansing Gel, apply DermoPure Triple Effect Serum and complement with a moisturizer for blemish-prone skin like DermoPure Protective Fluid SPF 30 or DermoPure Mattifying Fluid.
If you are using medical treatment for acne, we recommend cleansing your skin with DermoPure Cleansing Gel and using DermoPure Adjunctive Soothing Cream as care product.
What are post-acne marks (post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation or PIH for short)?
PIH is a type of hyperpigmentation of the skin that is mainly triggered by the way skin regenerates after inflammation. It can affect the face and body, typically especially UV-exposed areas, and appears as flat spots of hypercoloration. These range in color from pink to red, brown or black, depending on skin tone and the depth of hypercoloration. The root cause is increased melanin production, the pigment that defines the color of a person’s skin, which is stimulated by inflammatory factors. The blemish triggers melanocytes – the melanin-producing cells – to release excessive melanosomes (pigment granules). The excessive pigment granules darken and discolor the formerly stressed area. Once initial blemishes have subsided, spots of hypercoloration, so-called post-acne marks, can remain.
Additionally, sun exposure can aggravate PIH symptoms, darkening the affected patches and prolonging the time it takes for them to fade. Most acne-related PIH will eventually fade over time, but it can take several years or even a decade until it is fully gone*.
*Abad-Casintahan, F. et al., “Frequency and Characteristics of Acne-Related Post-Inflammatory Hyperpigmentation.” J Dermatol. 2016; 43:826–828.