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Mulling Over Melasma

When Pregnancy Increases
Skin Pigmentation

By Teri Brown

Pages:  1  2  3  

Changes are par for the course when it comes to nine months of pregnancy. You gain weight, your feet swell, your eating habits change and you may have morning sickness or chronic heartburn. Skin changes are also common – that's where the term "pregnancy glow" comes from. Nobody minds a bit of glow, but what happens when the skin changes aren't so attractive?

Kim Ford, a mother of two from Columbia, S.C., got melasma, or "pregnancy mask" as it's also called, during both of her pregnancies. "I noticed it both times at during the 5th month," says Ford. "I'm sure it appeared earlier, probably in the 4th, but by the 5th it was very noticeable, and that's when it caught my eye. After my second child, I was left with a dark patch of melasma under my left eye. It's not very large, and it didn't become noticeable until my postpartum. I thought it would disappear but it never did."

What Is Melasma?
Melasma is an increase in the pigmentation of the skin. Many women experience it, and while it also can occur in women who take birth control pills, it is more common in pregnancy. It's thought to be, in these instances, caused by the dysregulation of the progesterone to estrogen ratio. However, the medical community is torn on this because it isn't seen in postmenopausal women.

Barbara Dehn, a women's health nurse practitioner and the author of Your Personal Guide to Pregnancy (Blue Orchid Press, 2004), says melasma is pretty easy to detect. "It occurs in areas of the face that have been exposed to sunlight and is more common in women who tend toward darker complexions," says Dehn. "The areas of the face affected can be the cheeks, the upper lip or the chin." Dehn says it will not be spots, but a darkened area of one-half to three to four inches in diameter. The borders are irregular and may cover the entire cheek area or upper lip or chin.


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