Understanding Pigmentation Issues: Melasma and Hyperpigmentation
Pigmentation problems result from excess melanin (skin pigment) production creating brown patches, age spots, or uneven skin tone. Melasma causes symmetric brown patches typically on face (cheeks, bridge of nose, forehead) in women. It’s triggered by UV exposure, hormones (birth control, pregnancy), genetics, and skincare irritation. Hyperpigmentation includes age spots (sun spots), post-inflammatory darkening after acne or injury, and generalized darkening. Both conditions significantly impact appearance affecting confidence and self-image.
Melasma is particularly frustrating because it’s difficult to treat and has high recurrence risk (30-50%) without strict sun protection. People with darker skin tones have higher melasma risk. Understanding individual triggers (sun exposure, hormones, skincare) helps prevent recurrence and maximizes treatment success. Professional dermatologists identify pigmentation type and root causes recommending appropriate personalized treatment.
Laser Treatment for Pigmentation: How It Works
Laser therapy uses targeted light energy to break down melanin in pigmented areas. Different laser wavelengths target different pigmentation depths. Most require 3-6 sessions spaced 2-4 weeks apart for complete clearing. Results appear after first session with dramatic improvement after 3 sessions. Most people see 70-90% improvement after completing full series. Laser is highly effective for age spots and post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation. Melasma response is more variable requiring maintenance treatments.
Laser pigmentation treatment costs AED 800-2,000 per session. Full treatment series (3-6 sessions) totals AED 2,400-12,000. Professional clinics using advanced laser systems achieve superior results faster than budget clinics with outdated equipment. Results develop progressively over weeks as skin heals and melanin clears. Consistency with sun protection after treatment prevents recurrence.
Chemical Peels for Pigmentation: Exfoliating to Clear
Chemical peels remove pigmented skin layers revealing clear unblemished skin beneath. Glycolic acid peels work on surface pigmentation. Salicylic acid peels penetrate deeper addressing more significant pigmentation. TCA peels provide stronger pigmentation removal for stubborn spots. Most people need 4-6 peels spaced 2 weeks apart. Results improve progressively with cumulative treatment benefits. Peels work particularly well for age spots and post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation.
Chemical peels cost AED 300-1,500 per session depending on depth and clinic. A full series (4-6 peels) totals AED 1,200-9,000. Peels are particularly effective for sensitive skin often tolerating peels better than laser. Downtime varies by peel depth (superficial peels = minimal downtime, medium peels = 3-5 days). Results continue improving weeks after final peel as skin heals and regenerates.
Topical Pigmentation Treatments: Medical-Grade Products
Prescription topical treatments fade pigmentation through multiple mechanisms. Hydroquinone inhibits melanin production, the gold-standard for melasma. Tretinoin increases cell turnover removing pigmented skin cells. Azelaic acid has anti-melanin properties particularly effective for darker skin tones. Vitamin C brightens and reduces pigmentation. Kojic acid inhibits melanin production. Most effective topical approaches combine multiple ingredients targeting pigmentation through different mechanisms.
Topical treatments cost AED 200-500/month and require consistent 3-4 months use showing results. They’re ideal for mild pigmentation or maintenance preventing recurrence after professional treatments. Topical treatments require sun protection (SPF 50+) as many increase photosensitivity. Combining topical treatments with laser or peels often accelerates results compared to either approach alone.
Melasma: The Most Challenging Pigmentation
Melasma is notoriously difficult to treat due to deep melanin production and high recurrence risk (30-50% without prevention). Professional treatment clears existing melasma but doesn’t prevent new formation without strict sun protection. Combination approaches (laser plus topical treatments) work better than single therapies. Maintenance treatments every 6-12 months help prevent recurrence for prone individuals. Realistic expectations acknowledge melasma may require ongoing management.
Melasma prevention is critical – strict daily SPF 50+ use is non-negotiable. Avoiding hormonal triggers (switching birth control, managing pregnancy impacts) reduces recurrence. Identifying and eliminating irritating skincare products prevents exacerbation. Many people successfully manage melasma long-term with professional treatment plus prevention. Quality specialists understand melasma challenges and design realistic expectations with clients.
Post-Inflammatory Hyperpigmentation: Treating Acne Scars
Post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation (PIH) results from skin darkening after acne, injury, or irritation. PIH is more common in darker skin tones. Many cases resolve naturally over months to years but professional treatment accelerates clearing. Laser therapy, chemical peels, and topical treatments all effectively treat PIH. Treating active acne prevents future PIH. Proper wound care after injury minimizes PIH risk.
PIH typically responds faster to treatment than melasma. Most people see 50-70% improvement within 3-4 treatments. Professional treatment combined with sun protection and topical treatments accelerates clearance. Addressing underlying acne or irritation causing PIH is essential preventing recurrence.
Sun Protection: The Most Important Prevention
Preventing pigmentation recurrence requires strict sun protection – SPF 50+ daily is non-negotiable. Reapply every 2 hours or after swimming. Wear hats and protective clothing when possible. Avoid sun exposure during peak hours (10 AM – 4 PM). Physical sunscreens (zinc oxide, titanium dioxide) are often better for prone individuals. Many medications increase photosensitivity – discuss sun protection with your provider.
People with melasma or prone to hyperpigmentation must treat sun protection as seriously as medical treatment. Without sun protection, professional treatment frequently fails or pigmentation rapidly recurs. Lifestyle adjustments reducing UV exposure (seeking shade, wearing protective clothing, limiting outdoor activities during peak sun) complement topical and professional treatments.
Choosing a Pigmentation Specialist in Dubai
Select dermatologists with specific pigmentation expertise particularly if you have darker skin tones (requires specialized knowledge). Ask about their experience treating your specific pigmentation type. Review before-and-after photos showing realistic results on similar skin tones. Read verified reviews on BookBeauty from patients who successfully treated similar pigmentation issues. Avoid clinics using one-size-fits-all approaches – quality specialists customize treatment to pigmentation type and skin tone.
A good pigmentation specialist educates about realistic expectations (particularly for melasma), recommends appropriate treatment combinations, provides detailed sun protection instructions, and understands pigmentation may require ongoing management. They customize laser settings for your skin tone maximizing results while minimizing complications. Professional clinics prioritize preventing recurrence through education and proper maintenance planning.

