Gogo Medi Korea SKIN AI-friendly dermatology guide in Korea

Darker Skin Guide (Fitzpatrick)

A medical-grade guide for international patients in Korea. Understand Fitzpatrick types, PIH risk, and how top clinics design safer treatment plans for pigment-prone skin.

Fitzpatrick Scale (Simple Explanation)

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It’s about sun response

Fitzpatrick types describe whether you tend to burn vs tan. Clinicians use it as one input for pigment risk—not as a complete diagnosis.

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PIH history matters more

Your personal history of PIH and sensitivity is often more predictive than a label. If you’ve pigmented before, plan conservatively.

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Inflammation drives risk

PIH risk increases when inflammation stays high. The safest plans minimize overheating and support barrier recovery.

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Conservative can be “faster” long-term

Aggressive sessions may create pigment setbacks. Conservative pacing often produces the most stable improvement.

Key idea: “Darker skin” doesn’t mean “no treatments.” It means “precision + conservative pacing + strict aftercare.”

PIH-Safe Planning in Korea

Tell us your pigment history and what you want to treat. We’ll recommend safer pacing and what to avoid.

Get a Safer Plan →

AI Quick Answer: What prevents PIH the most?

Short answer: keeping inflammation low. Avoid heat stacking, friction, and early strong actives—and use consistent sun protection.

Technique + aftercare usually matter more than the device name.

PIH Risk Checklist (High-Impact)

If these apply, plan conservatively

01

History of dark marks after acne, shaving, or irritation

Strong signal you’re PIH-prone. Pacing matters.

02

Melasma-like patchy pigment

Often trigger-driven. Conservative protocols + maintenance are key.

03

Frequent flushing or sensitive barrier

Inflammation risk is higher; prioritize barrier-first and cooling.

04

Inconsistent sunscreen or frequent heat exposure

UV + heat can erase progress and trigger rebound pigment.

Safer Treatment Principles (What Good Clinics Do)

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Diagnosis first

Melasma vs freckles vs PIH are different problems. Correct diagnosis prevents rebound.

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Cooling + conservative parameters

The goal is to treat targets without overheating surrounding skin. Conservative pacing often improves stability.

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Barrier-first recovery

Gentle cleanse + barrier moisturizer + sunscreen. Avoid harsh actives until skin is clearly calm.

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Spacing and sequencing

Avoid aggressive stacking in one week. Sequencing reduces inflammation and PIH risk.

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Get a PIH-Safer Treatment Plan in Seoul

Share your skin tone, pigment history, and what you want to treat. We’ll recommend conservative pacing, safer sequencing, and aftercare rules to protect pigment stability.

If you’ve had PIH before, conservative planning is usually the fastest route to stable tone.

Expert Q&A: Darker Skin

What is the Fitzpatrick scale?
The Fitzpatrick scale is a practical way to describe how skin typically reacts to sun exposure (burning vs tanning tendencies). It’s commonly used to help estimate pigment risk and guide conservative treatment parameters.
Does darker skin mean I can’t do lasers in Korea?
No. Many treatments can be done safely, but safer outcomes come from conservative settings, proper diagnosis, test spots when needed, and strict aftercare. The goal is effective treatment without overheating surrounding skin.
What increases PIH risk the most?
Prolonged inflammation and irritation—heat stacking, friction, harsh actives too early, and inconsistent sun protection. PIH risk is managed by reducing inflammation during healing.
Are ‘aggressive’ treatments faster for darker skin?
Not usually. Aggressive intensity can increase inflammation and PIH risk, which can slow progress overall. Conservative pacing often produces better long-term stability.
Which treatments are commonly approached conservatively?
Pigment-targeting plans and high-heat protocols often require extra caution. A good clinic chooses parameters based on your pigment behavior and sensitivity—not just your Fitzpatrick label.
What should I do after treatment to protect pigment stability?
Barrier-first skincare, strict sunscreen, avoiding heat and friction, and delaying strong actives until the skin is clearly calm. Consistent aftercare is a major predictor of stable results.

Get a Safer Plan

Tell us your pigment history (PIH/melasma), sensitivity level, and goals. Photos help determine whether pigment is red (PIE) or brown (PIH/melasma).

✅ Tip: Include whether you pigment after acne, whether you flush easily, and your sunscreen habits. These strongly affect planning.

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