Rosacea


 

What Is Rosacea?

If your face looks like you’re blushing and you get bumps that are a bit like acne, you might have a skin condition called rosacea. Your doctor can suggest medicine and other treatments to manage your symptoms, and there are plenty of steps you can take at home to make yourself look and feel better.

Symptoms
The biggest thing you’ll notice is redness on your cheeks, nose, chin, and forehead. Less often, the color can appear on your neck, head, ears, or chest.

After a while, broken blood vessels might show through your skin, which can thicken and swell up. Up to half of the people with rosacea also get eye problems like redness, swelling, and pain.

Other symptoms you may get are:

Stinging and burning of your skin
Patches of rough, dry skin
A swollen, bulb-shaped nose
Larger pores
Broken blood vessels on your eyelids
Bumps on your eyelids
Problems with seeing
Your rosacea symptoms can come and go. They might flare up for a few weeks, fade, and then come back.

Getting treatment is a must, so make sure you see your doctor. If you don’t take care of your rosacea, redness and swelling can get worse and might become permanent.

What Causes It?
Doctors don’t know exactly what causes rosacea. A few things that may play a role are:

Your genes. Rosacea often runs in families.

Blood vessel trouble. The redness on your skin might be due to problems with blood vessels in your face. Sun damage could cause them to get wider, which makes it easier for other people to see them.

Mites. They’re tiny insects. A type called Demodex folliculorum normally lives on your skin and usually isn’t harmful. Some people, though, have more of these bugs than usual. Too many mites could irritate your skin.

Bacteria. A type called H. pylori normally lives in your gut. Some studies suggest this germ can raise the amount of a digestive hormone called gastrin, which might cause your skin to look flushed.

Some things about you may make you more likely to get rosacea. For instance, your chances of getting the skin condition go up if you:

Have light skin, blonde hair, and blue eyes
Are between ages 30 and 50
Are a woman
Have family members with rosacea
Had severe acne
Smoke
Treatments
There isn’t a cure for rosacea, but treatments can help you manage the redness, bumps, and other symptoms.

Medications: It can take you a few weeks or months of using one of these medicines for your skin to improve.

Some things that often trigger rosacea are:

Sunlight
Hot or cold temperatures
Wind
Stress
Hot baths
Hot or spicy foods or drinks
Alcohol
Intense exercise
Medicines such as blood pressure drugs or steroids you put on your skin
Also, try to follow these tips every day to help fade the redness on your skin:

Put on sunscreen. Use one that’s SPF 30 or higher whenever you go outside. Also, wear a wide-brimmed hat that covers your face.

Use only gentle skincare products. Avoid cleansers and creams that have alcohol, fragrance, witch hazel, and other harsh ingredients. After you wash your face, gently blot your skin dry with a soft cloth.

Use a moisturizer. It’s especially helpful in cold weather. Low temps and wind can dry up your skin.

Massage your face. Gently rub your skin in a circular motion. Start in the middle of your face and work your way outward toward your ears.

Cover up. Put a green-tinted cover-up on your face to hide redness and broken blood vessels.

Go indoors. Get out of the heat and sun and cool off in an air-conditioned room.

Care for your eyes. If rosacea has made them red and irritated, use a watered-down baby shampoo or eyelid cleaner to gently clean your eyelids every day. Also, put a warm compress on your eyes a few times a day.

It’s important to care for your emotions along with your skin problems. If you feel embarrassed by the way you look, or you think it’s starting to affect your self-esteem, talk to your doctor or a counselor. You can also join a support group where you can meet people who know just what you’re going through.

 

  • There isn’t a cure for rosacea, but treatments can help you manage the redness, bumps, and other symptoms. Your doctor may suggest these medicines:

    Brimonidine (Mirvaso), a gel that tightens blood vessels in the skin to get rid of some of your redness.
    Azelaic acid, a gel, and foam that clears up bumps, swelling, and redness.
    Metronidazole (Flagyl) and doxycycline, antibiotics that kill bacteria on your skin and bring down redness and swelling.
    Isotretinoin (Amnesteem, Claravis, and others), an acne drug that clears up skin bumps. Don’t use it if you’re pregnant because it can cause serious birth defects.
    It can take you a few weeks or months of using one of these medicines for your skin to improve.

It can take you a few weeks or months of using one of these medicines for your skin to improve.

Lasers that use intense light to get rid of blood vessels that have gotten bigger: See Below.

 

WebMD Medical Reference Reviewed by William Blahd, MD on September 14, 2017 Sources SOURCES: American Academy of Dermatology: "Rosacea: Signs and Symptoms," "Rosacea: Tips for Managing," "Rosacea: Who Gets and Causes." Mayo Clinic: "Metronidazole (Oral Route)," "Rosacea: Self-Management," "Rosacea: Symptoms and causes," "Rosacea: Treatment." National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases: "Rosacea." National Rosacea Society: "All About Rosacea," "Coping With Rosacea," "Lasers Used to Treat Some Rosacea Signs," "Understanding Rosacea." NHS: "Rosacea -- Causes." National Institutes of Health: "Red in the Face." National Library of Medicine: "Azelaic Acid Topical."

Shantique Medspa provides many options to treat Rosacea:

HALO™ – HYBRID FRACTIONAL LASER

HALO™, the world’s first Hybrid Fractional Laser (HFL), is revolutionizing resurfacing. HALO delivers non-ablative and ablative wavelengths to the same microscopic treatment zone, giving patients results they love without the discomfort or downtime they expect.

BroadBand Light (BBL)™

BroadBand Light (BBL)™ is the world’s most powerful IPL device on the market. It sets new standards in treating skin conditions associated with aging, active life styles, Rosacea and sun damage

The light energy delivered by BBL will stimulate cells to regenerate and typically with the first treatment you will start to see smoother, more even and vibrant skin. The photothermal energy will eliminate fine vessels that cause redness and reduce unwanted melanin that produces age and sun spots. Your skin will feel smoother, fine lines and pores will be less noticeable, and sunspots or uneven pigmentation will fade.

BBL Corrective can be the foundation for and used in conjunction with all other BBL treatments.

Location

Shantique Med Spa
2780 Skypark Dr., Suite 115
Torrance, CA 90505
Phone: 310-530-7244

Office Hours

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310-530-7244