Younique’s Solutions to Liver Spots in Los Angeles
No matter what you call them—liver spots, sun spots, brown spots, or age spots—we can address where sun, time, and heredity have made dark patches on your skin.
Causes of Liver Spots
- Sun exposure
- Aging
- Genetics
Commonly Affected Areas
- Face
- Shoulders
- Back of the hands
- Forearms
Liver Spot Treatments
What are liver spots?
Liver spots—aka: age spots, brown spots, sun spots, hyperpigmentation, or solar lentigines—cover a wide range of skin pigmentation disorders that can affect the natural beauty of your appearance. Many of these conditions can include only slight to moderate discoloration and are treatable with a precisely defined use of medical-grade applications.
Liver spots most often appear on human skin as people age. These uniformly-colored elements are typically brown or grayish in color, and they tend to be most pronounced on a person’s face, neck, hands, and chest. Despite their name, however, old age is not attributable to the skin’s change in pigment, which presents these well-defined markings. Rather, prolonged sun exposure is the root cause of these blemishes.
Are liver spots the same as melasma?
Though sometimes confused as the same thing, melasma is a different condition than the presentation of solar lentigines (liver spots, age spots, sun spots, etc). Liver spots are smaller spots that occur on women and men, especially past the age of 40, and happen most frequently wherever skin has been exposed to sunlight. The most common areas are the face, shoulders, chest, back, and hands.
Melasma usually presents as blotchy patches on the face, most notably on the forehead, nose, cheeks, upper lip, and chin. One of the biggest factors causing melasma isn’t aging or sunlight, but hormones. It’s sometimes called “the mask of pregnancy.” Melasma predominantly affects women.
How big do liver spots get?
Liver spots come in many sizes and shapes. Most of these age spots range from about the size of a freckle, to approximately 10 millimeters, or just under 1/2 an inch. Sometimes they present in groups or clusters, which makes them appear larger and more noticeable.