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Can you use retinol and hydroquinone together?
Let’s face it; aging has its perks. We have more experiences; most people claim they feel more confident in who they are and don’t care as much about what other people think. However, aging also affects our skin; we notice fine lines, dullness, brown spots, and sagging skin as we age. It’s unrealistic to expect to have the skin you had in your 20s as you get older, but it’s also essential to care for your skin so it stays healthy at every age.
That means moisturizing so your skin stays hydrated, applying sunscreen to protect it from skin cancer and premature signs of aging, and focusing on any skin concern that might be an issue for you, such as acne or eczema. Everyone’s skin is different; the sooner we address a problem, the sooner we can resolve it.
During one of my first adult visits to a dermatologist in my 30s, I was told I had a growing number of sunspots. Hyperpigmentation affects everyone to different degrees. It isn’t harmful to your skin, but having darker spots or patches on it affected my confidence and how I saw myself, and the dermatologist recommended hydroquinone.
According to the National Library of Medicine (NIH), hydroquinone is an agent used to lighten the darker spots or areas of the skin. It works by inhibiting the synthesis of melanin, which causes sunspots, age spots, hyperpigmentation…