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작성자 Marilou 작성일 26-07-13 11:03 조회 2회 댓글 0건

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What is a Dermamelan Peel? A Complete Guide


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The Dermamelan peel is a specialist in-clinic treatment specifically for and forms of hyperpigmentation. Unlike standard chemical peels — which work by removing the outer layers of skin to reveal fresher skin beneathDermamelan works at a deeper level, directly inhibiting the enzymes that produce excess melanin. For patients with established melasma that hasn’t responded to topical-only treatment, Dermamelan offers a more powerful intervention without the heat-based risks of aggressive laser.


This guide what the Dermamelan peel involves, how it works, who it suits, what recovery looks like, and where it fits relative to other and topical options at Centre for Surgery’s CQC-regulated Baker Street private hospital.



What the Dermamelan peel is


Dermamelan is a two-phase depigmentation system developed by Mesoestetic, a dermatology company. It combines a powerful in-clinic mask with a structured at-home maintenance regimen. Unlike most chemical peels, which work primarily through controlled skin shedding, Dermamelan works through melanogenesis inhibitiondirectly blocking the enzymatic pathway that produces excess melanin.


The active ingredients include:


The targets every step of the melanogenesis pathway simultaneously, rather than relying on a single mechanism. This is why Dermamelan often delivers results in stubborn melasma cases that haven’t to single-agent topical therapy.



How Dermamelan works


The treatment is delivered in two phases:


The mask is a thick, opaque cream generously to the entire face at our clinic. The application process is straightforward:


You leave the clinic wearing the mask and remove it at home using gentle soap and warm water at the prescribed time. The mask itself is the powerful intervention — it delivers the active ingredients in concentrations and contact times that no take-home product can match.


After the in-clinic mask, you with a structured at-home regimen of Dermamelan products for approximately three to four months. The home products work at lower concentrations than the mask but provide the sustained inhibition needed to consolidate results and prevent rebound.


The home regimen typically includes a daily depigmenting cream and a maintenance gel, applied morning and evening, non-negotiable daily broad-spectrum SPF 50 with iron oxide content for visible-light .



What Dermamelan treats


Dermamelan is most effective for:


It’s particularly valuable for darker Fitzpatrick skin types (IV to VI) where laser treatments carry higher risk of post-treatment hyperpigmentation. The non-thermal mechanism of Dermamelan avoids that risk.


Dermamelan also addresses several adjacent skin concerns alongside the primary pigmentation target — skin clarity and radiance, smoother texture, reduced pore size, and of sebum production that can benefit oily and acne-prone skin.



What to expect — treatment day and recovery


Your clinician takes a full medical history, examines your skin in detail, classifies the pattern and depth of your pigmentation, and confirms Dermamelan is the right approach for your specific case. We also assess your skin type and discuss what realistic outcomes look like.


For 7 to 14 days before the mask, avoid:


The actual appointment is short and simple. Cleansing, degreasing and mask typically take 30 minutes. The mask doesn’t feel painful — most patients describe mild warmth or tingling. You leave the clinic the mask, which appears as a pale yellow film across the face.


The mask remains in place for 8 to 12 hours (your clinician will specify the exact duration based on your ageing skin & wrinkles assessment). During this period the active ingredients are penetrating and the melanin-inhibition process is underway. You’ll be advised to:


After mask removal, the skin will feel tight and may appear mildly red. Over the 3 to 7 days, peeling and flaking occur as the surface skin sheds. This peeling is normal and is part of the treatment. Use the prescribed medical-grade moisturiser frequently to keep the skin comfortable and speed barrier .


Most patients describe this phase as similar to the recovery from a moderate sunburnuncomfortable rather than painful, with the skin feeling tight and looking flaky. Concealing makeup can usually go on by day 5 to 7 once the active peeling has settled.


The at-home Dermamelan products start a few days after the mask, once active peeling has settled. The regimen runs for approximately 3 to 4 months, with continued depigmenting effect as the active ingredients sustain tyrosinase inhibition. Strict daily SPF 50 is non-negotiable throughout.



Results and timeline


The pattern of improvement typically follows:


For severe or extensive melasma, a second mask application 2 to 4 weeks after the first can be performed to enhance results. Most patients respond well to a single mask treatment combined with the full at-home regimen.


Long-term results depend heavily on sun protection. Without ongoing UV protection — daily broad-spectrum SPF 50, ideally with iron oxide content for visible-light protectionpigmentation will return.



Dermamelan vs other pigmentation treatments


Topical regimens (such as the Obagi Nu-Derm system or modified Kligman formula combinations) work over months. They’re appropriate for mild melasma and as ongoing maintenance. Dermamelan delivers more intensive depigmentation in a shorter timeframe but at higher upfront cost and with more visible recovery. Most patients with established melasma benefit from Dermamelan plus a topical maintenance regimen, rather than topicals alone.


Laser treatments for melasma are restricted to low-fluence non-thermal protocols (typically Q-switched Nd:YAG at low fluence). They’re effective for some melasma patterns but carry risks of paradoxical worsening if the wrong protocol or settings are used. Dermamelan’s non-thermal mechanism avoids these risks entirely, making it safer for many darker-skinned patients where laser risk is higher.


For sunspots, freckles and lentigines, laser outperforms Dermamelan. For diffuse melasma and mixed-depth pigmentation, Dermamelan often outperforms laser. The choice depends on the specific pattern.


Standard chemical peels (TCA, glycolic, salicylic) work through controlled exfoliation. They can help superficial pigmentation but underperform on dermal pigment. Dermamelan’s depigmenting mechanism reaches deeper than exfoliation-based peels.


Oral tranexamic acid (250 mg twice daily) has good evidence for moderate-to-severe melasma. Some patients from tranexamic acid with Dermamelan; others respond well to either alone. We discuss this individually at consultation.



How many Dermamelan treatments you’ll need


Most patients need a single mask application followed by the full 3–4 month at-home regimen. For extensive or particularly stubborn melasma, a second mask can be 2–4 weeks after the first to enhance results.


After the initial treatment, periodic maintenance — either repeat Dermamelan every 12–18 months or sustained topical regimen with strict sun protection — is needed to maintain results. Melasma is chronic, and treatment achieves remission rather than cure.



What areas can be treated


Dermamelan is designed for facial use. The mask is applied across the full face. It’s not for body areas — different formulations exist for those purposes, but Dermamelan specifically is a facial intervention.


The neck and décolletage are sometimes treated alongside the face in patients with extensive pigmentation, though application requires careful technique and the recovery profile differs slightly.



Side effects and what to expect


The most commonly encountered effects:


Less common but possible:


Serious complications are very uncommon with experienced operators. We carefully select candidates and adjust application duration based on skin type.



Who shouldn’t have Dermamelan


Specific contraindications:


None of these are necessarily lifetime exclusions. A consultation establishes whether timing or alternative approaches allow safe treatment.



What we don’t recommend



Frequently asked questions


Initial brightening is visible within the first 2 weeks. Significant in pigmentation by weeks 3 to 6. Optimal results between 2 and 3 months as the at-home regimen completes its course.


No — most patients mild warmth or tingling during the mask wear. There’s no significant discomfort during or removal.


Plan 5 to 7 days of social downtime to navigate the peeling phase comfortably. Most patients can return to work within 2 to 3 days but may want to avoid major social events during active peeling.


No — we don’t treat during pregnancy or breastfeeding. Most patients with pregnancy-related melasma (chloasma) wait until postpartum to treat. Topical sun protection and gentle skincare are the safe approach.


Yes — though melasma is much more common in women, men do develop the condition and respond equivalently to treatment. The protocol is identical.


With strict sun and the maintenance regimen, results sustain for 12 to 18 months or longer. Without sun protection, pigmentation returns. Periodic re-treatment (every 12 to 18 months) sustains control.


Yes, in carefully staged combinations. We typically allow 4 to 6 weeks between and any subsequent laser treatment, and the combination is reserved for clinical situations. We design combined plans at consultation.


The treatment includes the in-clinic mask appointment plus the structured at-home product regimen for 3 to 4 months. A consultation gives an exact quote based on your specific plan. is available through Chrysalis Finance.


Our laser dermatologists and aesthetic practitioners deliver Dermamelan within the framework of our pigmentation programmesalongside topical prescription regimens, low-fluence laser where appropriate, and oral tranexamic acid for severe cases. The Dermamelan mask is one tool among several, calibrated to your specific pigmentation pattern at our CQC-regulated Baker Street private hospital.


Centre for Surgery · CQC-regulated · GMC specialist-registered surgeons · · · ·


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Centre for Surgery is a CQC-regulated private on London’s Baker Street, delivering plastic and cosmetic surgery through GMC-registered specialist surgeons. Our expertise spans facial procedures including and , , for men, and body contouring procedures such as and . Patient safety, surgical excellence and natural-looking results sit at the heart of everything we do.


Centre for is a CQC-regulated private hospital on London’s iconic , offering plastic and cosmetic surgery led by GMC-registered consultant surgeons.




Marylebone

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