A guide to treating sun damage (solar lentigines, diffuse hyperpigmentation, actinic changes, rough texture) at med spas — IPL, laser, chemical peels, and combination approaches by damage type.
· By MedSpot Editorial · 5 min read
Sun damage is one of the most common reasons patients seek med spa treatments — encompassing brown spots, rough texture, uneven tone, and early pre-cancerous changes. The right treatment depends on the type and depth of damage. Here's how to navigate the options.
Solar lentigines ("liver spots," "age spots"): Discrete, well-defined flat brown spots. These are not moles — they're localized concentrations of melanin from UV exposure. Common on the face, chest, and hands.
Diffuse hyperpigmentation / dyschromia: Uneven skin tone, mottled appearance, a mix of darker and lighter patches. Often the baseline "background" of sun damage on the face.
Actinic bronzing / overall darkening: The overall tanning effect of cumulative UV — the "weathered" appearance.
Telangiectasias (broken capillaries): Small visible red/pink blood vessels from UV damage and chronic flushing/rosacea. Not melanin-based; require vascular-targeting treatment.
Rough texture / actinic keratoses: Thickening of the skin from UV damage. Actinic keratoses (AK) are pre-malignant lesions — rough, scaly patches that should be evaluated by a dermatologist before cosmetic treatment.
Important: If you have lesions that are changing, bleeding, or look suspicious, see a dermatologist for evaluation before any cosmetic treatment.
Best treatments:
Caution for darker skin tones (Fitzpatrick IV–VI): IPL/BBL can cause PIH in darker skin. Nd:YAG 1064 nm is safer; consultation with a provider experienced in treating darker skin is essential.
Best treatments:
At-home maintenance: Tretinoin + SPF 30+ are the most effective topicals for maintaining treatment results and preventing recurrence.
Best treatments:
These are separate from melanin-based brown spots — both can be addressed in same IPL session with appropriate filters.
Best treatments:
For actinic keratoses specifically: See a dermatologist. AKs may be treated with liquid nitrogen (cryotherapy), topical Efudex (5-fluorouracil), or photodynamic therapy (PDT) — procedures done in dermatology offices, not cosmetic med spas.
IPL (Intense Pulsed Light) and BBL (BroadBand Light, Sciton's version) are the workhorses of sun damage treatment at med spas.
How it works: Broad-spectrum light pulses are absorbed by melanin (brown) and oxyhemoglobin (red), creating localized heating that destroys the target. The skin clears the debris over 7–14 days.
The "coffee grounds" effect: Brown spots appear to darken and look worse for 7–14 days post-treatment before flaking off. This is the expected treatment response — not a complication.
Sessions: 3–5 sessions for optimal clearing; single sessions improve but a series is needed for comprehensive results.
Maintenance: Annual or biannual IPL maintains results. Sun protection is essential to prevent new damage.
Contraindications:
Cost: $300–$600 per session; $900–$2,500 for a series.
All sun damage treatments will fail or partially reverse without consistent SPF use. UV exposure drives new melanin production and recurrence.
The protocol:
This isn't optional — it's the reason some patients think their treatments "didn't work" when they see recurrence in 6 months without SPF compliance.
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