🔬Understanding PIH: How UV (UVA & UVB) Affects Melanocytes and Skin Pigmentation
Post-Inflammatory Hyperpigmentation (PIH) does not occur randomly. It is a biological response involving UV radiation, inflammation, melanocyte activation, and skin barrier repair mechanisms.
Before understanding PIH, it is essential to understand how ultraviolet (UV) radiation affects the skin and pigment-producing cells.
☀️ What is UV Radiation?
UV radiation from the sun is divided into two main types:
UVA (Aging Rays)
penetrates deeply into the dermis
present throughout the day and year
passes through clouds and glass
contributes to long-term skin damage and photoaging
UVB (Burning Rays)
primarily affects the epidermis (surface layer)
responsible for sunburn
strongest during peak sunlight hours
directly damages skin cells
Both UVA and UVB contribute to skin stress and inflammation, but through different mechanisms.
🧬 How UV Affects Melanocytes
Melanocytes are pigment-producing cells located in the basal layer of the epidermis. Their function is to produce melanin, which provides skin color and protects against UV damage.
When skin is exposed to UV radiation:
UV causes cellular stress and DNA damage signals
The skin activates an inflammatory protective response
Melanocytes are stimulated to produce more melanin
Melanin is transferred to surrounding keratinocytes
This is a natural defense mechanism designed to protect deeper skin layers from UV injury.
⚠️ When This Process Becomes PIH
In normal conditions, melanin production is temporary and protective.
However, PIH develops when melanocyte activation becomes excessive or prolonged due to additional stress factors such as:
acne inflammation
irritation from skincare products or procedures
skin barrier damage
repeated UV exposure
repeated friction (rubbing, scratching, or pressure on the skin)
These factors increase inflammatory signaling and disrupt normal healing balance, leading to persistent pigmentation.
🧬 Clinical Insight
PIH is not caused by UV exposure alone. It results from a combination of:
inflammation
melanocyte overactivation
skin barrier disruption
UV exposure (UVA + UVB)
immune system activation during skin barrier repair (healing phase after injury)
When the skin barrier is injured, the body initiates a repair process. During this healing phase, the immune system becomes active to restore damaged tissue and protect the skin.
However, this immune-driven repair process also releases inflammatory mediators that can:
prolong inflammation
increase melanocyte stimulation
amplify pigment production
delay resolution of post-inflammatory marks
This is why PIH is more common and more persistent in acne-prone, sensitive, or frequently irritated skin.
✨ Key Takeaway
UV radiation activates melanocytes as a protective response. However, when combined with inflammation, barrier damage, or repeated irritation, this response becomes prolonged and excessive.
This leads to Post-Inflammatory Hyperpigmentation (PIH), which is not just a pigment issue, but a result of an ongoing inflammatory and immune response in the skin.
Understanding this mechanism is essential before choosing any treatment approach.
🧠Related Reading:
Angelina
Medical Esthetician (18 years experience)
Skin Logic by Angelina