Showing posts with label PIH Melasma Acne Marks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PIH Melasma Acne Marks. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 3, 2026

PIH vs Melasma vs Acne Marks – Clinical Differences Explained

 

🔬PIH vs Melasma vs Acne Marks – Clinical Differences Explained

Many people confuse PIH, melasma, and acne marks because they all appear as dark or discolored patches on the skin. However, these conditions have different causes, behavior, and treatment approaches.

Correct identification is essential for effective skincare results.


🧬 1. Post-Inflammatory Hyperpigmentation (PIH)

PIH occurs after inflammation or skin injury.

Common triggers:

  • acne

  • irritation

  • trauma

  • friction

  • skin treatments

Key features:

  • appears after inflammation heals

  • brown or dark marks

  • location matches previous inflammation

  • improves gradually with time and care


☀️ 2. Melasma

Melasma is a chronic pigment condition influenced by hormones and UV exposure.

Common triggers:

  • hormonal changes

  • sun exposure

  • pregnancy

  • heat exposure

Key features:

  • symmetrical patches

  • often on cheeks, forehead, upper lip

  • brown or gray-brown color

  • persistent and recurring


🧬 3. Acne Marks (Post-Acne Marks)

Acne marks are often confused with PIH, but include both:

  • PIH (pigmentation)

  • post-acne redness (PIE – Post-Inflammatory Erythema)

Key features:

  • appear after acne lesions

  • may be red, pink, or brown

  • depend on skin healing response


⚖️ Key Differences

  • PIH → inflammation-based pigmentation

  • Melasma → hormonal + UV-related pigmentation

  • Acne marks → combination of redness and pigmentation


🧴 Why Correct Identification Matters Before Treatment

PIH, melasma, and acne marks may look similar, but they do not always respond to the same treatment.

When pigmentation is treated incorrectly, the skin may become more irritated, inflamed, or sensitive. This can make discoloration appear darker or last longer.

For example, PIH often needs inflammation control, barrier repair, sun protection, and careful pigment-regulating ingredients.

Melasma often needs long-term management because it can be influenced by hormones, UV exposure, heat, and repeated inflammation.

Acne marks may include both pigmentation and redness, so the treatment approach depends on whether the mark is brown, red, purple, or mixed.

This is why professional skin assessment is important before using strong acids, retinoids, vitamin C, peels, laser, or aggressive exfoliation.

The goal is not only to fade marks quickly.

The goal is to prevent new inflammation and avoid making pigmentation worse.


🧠 Clinical Insight

Misdiagnosis is one of the most common reasons for poor treatment results.

Using the wrong treatment approach can:

  • worsen pigmentation

  • delay healing

  • increase skin sensitivity

Correct identification is the first step before any treatment.

Close-up image of melasma-like pigmentation, PIH, and small syringoma-like bumps under the eye


✨ Key Takeaway

Not all dark spots are the same.

Understanding whether the condition is PIH, melasma, or acne-related marks is essential for choosing the correct treatment strategy and avoiding long-term skin damage.


🧠Related Reading:

 ðŸ‘‰PIH Hub 

  👉PIH & PIE

  👉Why PIH Lasts So Long

 ðŸ‘‰ Acne Hub

 ðŸ‘‰ Skin Barrier Hub

 ðŸ‘‰Chemical Peels

👉 Vit C and Acne/PIH


Angelina
Medical Esthetician (18 years experience)
Skin Logic by Angelina



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