meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
Beauty Bytes with Dr. Kay: Secrets of a Plastic Surgeon™

451: Treating Hyperpigmentation: The do's and don'ts

Beauty Bytes with Dr. Kay: Secrets of a Plastic Surgeon™

Kay Durairaj, MD, FACS @beautybydrkay

Health & Fitness, Medicine, Arts, Management & Marketing, Fashion & Beauty, Business

5604 Ratings

🗓️ 17 August 2022

⏱️ 12 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

As a natural part of the aging process, our skin starts to darken, become irregular, and leathery. Hyperpigmentation, a stubborn skin condition that creates dark patches or spots on the skin, leads to uneven skin tone. In this podcast, I talk about the causes and effects of hyperpigmentation, and the amazing benefits of my Botanical Brightener that targets stubborn dark spots. It contains:
  • Hydroquinone
  • Glycolic Acid
  • Kojic Acid
  • Licorice Extract
  • Hyaluronic Acid
These ingredients are also paired with my Night Quench Cream for Intensive Recovery. Got a question or something you’d like covered on the podcast? Send me a DM or email [email protected] and I’d be happy to respond!

Click Here for my KD Botanical Brightener!
Click Here to check out my Instagram!
Click Here to shop my KD Skincare!
Click Here to listen to more podcasts!

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Well, hello, hello, guys, you're listening to Beauty Bites with Dr. K., Secrets of a Plastic Surgeon, and it's time for a five-minute Friday.

0:21.2

I'm going to talk to you all about hyperpigmentation and brightening your brown spots.

0:27.3

So if you are noticing pigmentation changes, it generally comes from several different causes,

0:33.5

one being the sun and solar damage, giving you solar lentigenies or darkening brown spots number two being

0:42.7

from hormonal changes such as pregnancy giving you a condition called mollasma number three

0:50.0

post-inflammatory conditions where you've had irritation, acne, or irregular patches develop in

0:58.3

the skin that cause pigment to occur after this inflammatory cascade. And number four might be

1:05.0

from trauma, abrasion, or, you know, scarring that can happen to the skin. These are the biggest causes of hyperpigmentation, and none of them need to happen.

1:16.9

We can inhibit all of these different things.

1:19.9

We can inhibit sun damage by wearing a protective, reflective sunscreen, like a mineral-based

1:24.9

zinc or titanium.

1:26.6

We can inhibit changes related to post-inflammatory

1:30.4

pigmentation by reducing active acne breakouts or treating with anti-inflammatory ingredients. We can reduce

1:37.4

melasma changes by stopping the production of excess melanin by using products like tyrosanase inhibitors that block

1:45.8

melanin production.

1:47.5

And we can reduce hopefully scarring by avoiding irritation of the skin surface and skin

1:52.3

injuries.

1:53.6

The bottom line is brightening the skin is going to make you feel better about yourself.

1:59.2

You don't have to have light white skin to look good. You have to have

2:02.5

skin that has even tonations and really like a pearlescent, illuminant quality to it. So I like the

2:12.0

idea of brightening skin because as we age, skin is going to become modeled, it's going to become

2:17.4

irregular, it's going to become irregular, it's going to become

...

Please login to see the full transcript.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from Kay Durairaj, MD, FACS @beautybydrkay, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of Kay Durairaj, MD, FACS @beautybydrkay and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright © Tapesearch 2025.