foidslayer
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Pharmaceutical Skincare
1. Sunscreen is mandatory.
If you use tretinoin, tazarotene, azelaic acid, isotretinoin, or anything that makes your skin more reactive, sunscreen is not optional. Dermatology guidance generally recommends broad-spectrum, water-resistant SPF 30+ minimum; for a retinoid routine, SPF 50 / PA++++ is the safer standard. (AAD)
2. Pick ONE main retinoid lane.
Do not run tretinoin + tazarotene together like a psycho. More irritation does not equal better. Tazarotene labels specifically warn that stacking topical acne therapies can cause cumulative irritation. (DailyMed)
3. Isotretinoin is not a cosmetic supplement.
It is for severe, resistant nodular acne and needs medical supervision. Labels reserve it for severe acne that has not responded to conventional treatment. (DailyMed)
4. If you are under 18, have eczema, severe irritation, or cystic acne: dermatologist first.
If you use tretinoin, tazarotene, azelaic acid, isotretinoin, or anything that makes your skin more reactive, sunscreen is not optional. Dermatology guidance generally recommends broad-spectrum, water-resistant SPF 30+ minimum; for a retinoid routine, SPF 50 / PA++++ is the safer standard. (AAD)
2. Pick ONE main retinoid lane.
Do not run tretinoin + tazarotene together like a psycho. More irritation does not equal better. Tazarotene labels specifically warn that stacking topical acne therapies can cause cumulative irritation. (DailyMed)
3. Isotretinoin is not a cosmetic supplement.
It is for severe, resistant nodular acne and needs medical supervision. Labels reserve it for severe acne that has not responded to conventional treatment. (DailyMed)
4. If you are under 18, have eczema, severe irritation, or cystic acne: dermatologist first.
What it does:
Sunscreen protects against UV-driven pigmentation, collagen breakdown, inflammation, and photoaging. Retinoids can make your skin more irritated/reactive, and tretinoin labeling tells users to minimize sunlight exposure while using it. (DailyMed)
How to use:
Morning, every day. Two-finger amount for face/neck. Reapply if sweating, outside, or near strong sun.
Chemical formation:
Sunscreen is not one molecule. The formula depends on the UV filters in the product. Check the back label.
Common UV filters:
Zinc oxide: ZnO
Titanium dioxide: TiO2
Avobenzone: C20H22O3
Octocrylene: C24H27NO2
(pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
No SPF = no retinoid. You are basically paying for progress at night and burning it off in the morning.
View attachment 364398
Best for:
Comedones, acne prevention, texture, early anti-aging, clogged pores, mild post-acne marks.
What it does:
Tretinoin helps reduce microcomedone formation and increases turnover of follicular epithelial cells, which is why it is useful for acne prevention. (DailyMed)
Chemical formation:
Tretinoin = all-trans retinoic acid.
Molecular formula: C20H28O2.
Class: topical retinoid / retinoic acid receptor agonist. (pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
How to use:
Start 2–3 nights per week. Pea-sized amount for the whole face. Avoid eyelids, corners of nose, lips, and broken skin. Moisturizer before or after depending on sensitivity.
Common mistake:
Using a huge amount. A bigger blob causes peeling and burning.
Best for:
Stubborn acne, oily/thicker skin, texture, scarring support, people who already tolerate tretinoin.
What it does:
Tazarotene is a retinoid prodrug. Your skin converts it into tazarotenic acid, which binds retinoic acid receptors, especially RAR-beta and RAR-gamma. (DailyMed)
Chemical formation:
Tazarotene formula: C21H21NO2S.
Active metabolite tazarotenic acid formula: C19H17NO2S. (pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
How to use:
Only use this as your main retinoid, not on top of tretinoin. Start low frequency, like 1–2 nights weekly, then build slowly if your barrier tolerates it.
Warning:
Tazarotene can be harsh. If your face feels shiny, tight, hot, cracked, or burns with moisturizer, stop using it.
Best for:
Post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation, redness, mild acne, sensitive acne-prone skin, rosacea-prone skin.
What it does:
Azelaic acid has antimicrobial activity against acne-related bacteria and Staph epidermidis in vitro; it is also used because it can calm inflammation and help uneven tone. (DailyMed)
Chemical formation:
Azelaic acid = nonanedioic acid.
Molecular formula: C9H16O4.
Class: saturated dicarboxylic acid. (pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
How to use:
Use in the morning under moisturizer/SPF, or on non-retinoid nights. Start once daily. If it stings slightly at first, that can happen, but burning/itching/rash means stop or reduce.
Azelaic acid is one of the best workers for acne marks and redness.
Best for:
Oily skin, jawline acne, beard-area acne, acne that seems androgen-driven.
What it does:
Clascoterone is a topical androgen receptor inhibitor. The idea is local anti-androgen activity in the skin, not lowering your whole body testosterone. It is still prescription territory. (jddonline.com)
Chemical formation:
Clascoterone formula: C24H34O5.
Class: topical androgen receptor antagonist. (pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
How to use:
Usually used as prescribed, often twice daily. Works best when the rest of the routine is stable.
Warning:
Not “just a moisturizer.” Official safety info discusses possible HPA-axis suppression, and labels mention adverse events like hyperkalemia in clinical safety reporting. (winlevi-hcp.com)
Best for:
This is mostly discussed for estrogen-deficient / aging skin contexts, not normal teenage male acne routines.
What it may do:
Topical estrogen research is mostly about aging or estrogen-deficient skin, with some evidence for collagen, hydration, epidermal thickness, and barrier-related benefits, but the evidence base is not the same as acne meds like retinoids or azelaic acid. (ScienceDirect)
Chemical formation:
Estriol formula: C18H24O3.
Class: estrogen steroid hormone. (pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
Hard warning:
Do not use estriol nightly. It is hormone-active. it's a doctor-only prescription.
Best for:
Severe cystic/nodular acne, scarring acne, extremely oily skin, acne that survived proper topical routines and antibiotics.
What it does:
Isotretinoin is an oral retinoid used for severe recalcitrant nodular acne. It can massively reduce sebum, but it has serious side-effect monitoring requirements. (DailyMed)
Chemical formation:
Isotretinoin = 13-cis retinoic acid.
Molecular formula: C20H28O2.
Same formula as tretinoin, different isomer/shape. (pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
Warning:
This is doctor-only. Bloodwork/monitoring matters. (DailyMed)
Best for:
Reducing dryness, tightness, flaking, and irritation from actives.
What it does:
Hyaluronic acid is a water-binding glycosaminoglycan. It helps hydration but does not replace a real moisturizer. Use it on damp skin, then seal with moisturizer.
Chemical formation:
Hyaluronic acid is a polymer, not one small molecule.
Empirical repeating unit: (C14H21NO11)n.
Sodium hyaluronate: C14H22NNaO11. (American Chemical Society)
Hydration is not optional if you are running retinoids. A destroyed barrier products look bad.
Routine Table (DO NOT USE EVERYTHING AT ONCE)
| Routine Lane | Morning | Night | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Beginner acne / marks | Cleanser or rinse → Hyaluronic acid on damp skin → Azelaic acid → Moisturizer → SPF 50 | Cleanser → Hyaluronic acid on damp skin → Moisturizer → Tretinoin 2–3x weekly → Moisturizer | Best starting lane. HA helps reduce dryness from tretinoin. Do this for 8–12 weeks before changing everything. |
| Oily / jawline acne | Cleanser → Hyaluronic acid on damp skin → Clascoterone if prescribed → Azelaic acid → Moisturizer → SPF 50 | Cleanser → Hyaluronic acid on damp skin → Clascoterone if prescribed → Moisturizer → Tretinoin on retinoid nights → Moisturizer | Good for androgen-pattern oily acne, but clascoterone is prescription. HA helps keep the barrier from drying out while using actives. |
| Advanced retinoid lane | Cleanser/rinse → Hyaluronic acid on damp skin → Azelaic acid if tolerated → Moisturizer → SPF 50 | Cleanser → Hyaluronic acid on damp skin → Moisturizer → Tazarotene 1–2x weekly at first → Moisturizer | Use HA as barrier support. Do not combine tretinoin and tazarotene. Tazarotene replaces tretinoin. |
| Barrier repair week | Rinse → Hyaluronic acid on damp skin → Moisturizer → SPF 50 | Cleanser → Hyaluronic acid on damp skin → Moisturizer only | Use when skin burns, flakes, stings, or looks shiny/tight. No actives. Just hydration and repair. |
| Isotretinoin lane | Gentle cleanser/rinse → Hyaluronic acid on damp skin → Moisturizer → SPF 50 | Gentle cleanser → Hyaluronic acid on damp skin → Moisturizer/lip balm | HA can help dryness, but isotretinoin should be doctor-managed. Usually keep topicals minimal unless your derm says otherwise. |
| Estriol lane | Not default | Doctor-only if medically appropriate. Hyaluronic acid + moisturizer can still be used for hydration support. | Not a normal skinmaxx. Do not casually add hormones. |
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