Tuesday, March 25, 2008
Your Skin During Pregnancy
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Congratulations, mommy-to-be! You most likely have stacks of books at your bedside describing the fascinating changes your body will undergo on this 40-week journey. Yet few will offer details about some of the most glaringly obvious changes that will face you in the mirror: the ones on your skin!
Pregnancy-related hormone changes can induce new bumps and spots to appear on your skin, or may alter pre-existing conditions. Use the following guide to help decipher these changes and learn how to treat and prevent them.
Acne
Some women find their skin actually improves during pregnancy. Not you? If you were prone to breakouts pre-pregnancy, your acne may worsen as pregnancy hormones cause your sebaceous glands to secrete more oil. Many prescription acne medications are unsafe during pregnancy, but there are strategies to help you fend off breakouts.
Doctor’s Orders: Use gentle soapless cleansers, such as Cetaphil Cleanser, twice daily and resist the urge to scrub or use astringents frequently. These will merely irritate your sensitive skin. Use non-comedogenic facial moisturizers, such as Neutrogena Facial Moisture. If your inflammatory acne persists, your dermatologist can prescribe topical medications that may be safely used during pregnancy.
Melasma
Almost 70% of pregnant women experience the “mask of pregnancy”, or melasma, which appears as mottled brown pigmentation on the forehead, cheeks, and upper lip. Elevated levels of estrogen, progesterone and melanocyte-stimulating hormone work together to produce this increased pigment in response to sun exposure. Melasma often subsides after delivery, but in some cases can be persistent.
Doctor’s Orders: Ultraviolet light exposure worsens melasma. Use a broad-spectrum, high-spf sunscreen, such as Aveeno Positively Radiant spf 30 Daily Moisturizer. Applying this on a daily basis, even on cloudy or wintery days, may prevent or lessen this pigmentation. Your dermatologist may prescribe a combination of tretinoin, hydroquinone and topical steroids to treat persistent post-partum melasma.
Stretch Marks
These dreaded pink, red, or brown depressed streaks can appear on your belly, buttocks, thighs, hips and breasts. The straight truth is that there is no way to prevent stretch marks during pregnancy. If you are genetically predisposed to develop them, they will appear.
Doctor’s Orders: Enjoy your pregnancy and motherhood! We know of no treatments that are medically proven to diminish stretch marks, so don’t worry about them. If your stretching skin is itchy, then by all means apply an emollient. Rest assured that most stretch marks fade into faint, silvery lines post-partum and after delivery, your dermatologist can treat resistant marks with tretinoin cream or a pulsed dye laser.
Itchiness and Rashes
As your belly and breasts enlarge during the second and third trimester, your skin may become itchier. Pregnancy-related hormones may also trigger increased sweating, which can cause heat rash or irritation in the skin creases. You may notice small, itchy bumps around the hair follicles on your upper arms. This benign condition, called keratosis pilaris (KP), is often worsened or triggered during pregnancy.
Rarely, women in their third trimester can develop an itchy, hive-like rash on their abdomen. Called pruritic, urticarial papules and plaques of pregnancy (or PUPPP), this rash can produce maddening itching for women in late pregnancy.
Doctor’s Orders: Hydrate your skin at every opportunity, particularly immediately after your shower. Cerave Lotion is particularly good at restoring your skin’s barrier function, and Am-Lactin Cream (which may be ordered by your pharmacist) can work wonders at smoothing KP. Speaking of showers: use the least amount of soap possible! Even so-called moisturizing bars can be irritating. If itching persists contact your dermatologist, who may prescribe anti-inflammatory lotions or creams that are safe during pregnancy.
Hair Loss
Your hair, which grew so lush and thick during pregnancy, is now falling out! You have a lovely 3 month-old infant at home, but are despairing at your hair shedding, or telogen effluvium. The hormonal changes of pregnancy and delivery trigger a shift of your growing hairs into the resting, or telogen, phase. 1-3 months later, these hairs normally shed.
Doctors Orders: Never fear! Your hairs are normal, they are simply resting. After they have shed, they will most likely go back into their normal growth phase and will regrow. In the unlikely event that your hair loss persists beyond 6 months, a dermatologist may be able to evaluate and treat other causes of hair shedding.
Changing Moles
Pregnancy-related hormones can cause skin darkening, particularly along the linea nigra, the areola, and any freckles. Occasionally, moles will also enlarge and change with pregnancy. Although most of these changing moles will be benign, they should be evaluated by a dermatologist to ensure that they have not evolved into melanoma, a dangerous and potentially deadly form of skin cancer among young women.
Doctor’s Orders: Any changing mole during pregnancy should be evaluated by your dermatologist to be certain that it is benign. Some enlarging moles that become irritated along the neck or under the arms can be easily removed in your dermatologist’s office to help you feel more comfortable as your pregnancy progresses.
Robin Travers is a doctor who can make even the most derm-challenged mom to be (or just plain old derm-challenged) feel dazzling and flawless. To read more about her, click here.


Comments
I was very curious to hear more about the changes of moles during pregnancy. I have a mole just above my pubic hair that has gotten larger since I became pregnant. I am no longer pregnant now though, my son is over a year old. My tummy stretched out alot during my pregnancy, and has left my skin very loose on my tummy. But would my mole just be larger now because of my tummy streching?Or would MY mole return to its previous size? My mole looks very irregular, which worries me. But I cannot find anything about moles streching during pregnancy…
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