Skin terms
Skin Types
General
Definitions
Forms of Pigment
Advanced conditions
100

Skin Analysis

The process in which the esthetician examines the client's freshly cleansed skin with good lighting and voices their findings to the client. This process clarifies what conditions the client's skin is presenting and allows the esthetician to educate and give greater insight to the client's skin concerns.

100

Skin Type

A classification of a person's genetic oil production and ability to retain water. Types include dry, oily, and combination.

100

Skin Condition

A long term or temporary condition of the skin that can impact it's health

100

Hyperpigmentation

darkened patches or spots on the skin, resulting from the skin protecting itself from trauma.

100

Acne

inherited disorder of the pores where dead skin cells combine with sweat, oil, and pore cloggers to create comedones of varying forms

200

Dehydrated Skin

skin condition where the skin does not contain enough water.

200

Dry skin

skin that lacks oil production

200

Erythema

skin redness

200

Melasma

Form of hyperpigmentation caused by changing hormones. Usually appears in a specific pattern on the skin, also referred to as "pregnancy mask."

200

Milia

small, raised, pearly white bump on the skin that appears similar to a whitehead, but occurs deeper into the skin. Not extractable by estheticians as it requires a needle.

300

Sensitive Skin

condition where the skin is easily irritated and often has reactions such as redness, rash, stinging, itching, and burning. Can be temporary or lifelong.

300

Oily Skin

Skin with excess oil production

300

Free Radicals

unstable molecules that can damage healthy skin cells.

300

Hypopigmentation

a lightening of the skin due to melanin depletion

300

Rosacea

chronic, inflammatory skin condition that causes redness, flushing, and sensitivity

400

Sensitized Skin

skin that is easily irritated, and shows redness, rash, stinging, itching, or burning with minimal stimulation. Temporary condition caused by overuse of certain products, medications, or environmental exposure to extreme temperatures or industrial chemicals.

400

Combination Skin

skin with areas of excess oil and areas lacking oil.

400

Antioxidants

A substance that reduces damage due to oxygen, such as that caused by free radicals.

400

Post Inflammatory Hyperpigmentation

brown or dark marks caused by excess melanin production as a result of trauma to the skin. More common in deeper skin but can happen in all Fitzpatrick types.

400

Sebaceous Hyperplasia

enlarged, overactive sebaceous glands that appear like a small donut-shaped lesion, often on the cheeks or forehead.

500

Reactive Skin

skin that turns temporarily red with minimal stimulation and does not sting, itch, rash, or feel excessive burning.

500

Normal Skin

skin that has a perfect balance of oil and water

500

Broken Capillaries

tiny blood vessels that widen and narrow too quickly and cause the vessel walls to tear and the blood to leak out, causing visible red broken capillaries.

500

Post Inflammatory Erythema

red, pink, or purple marks caused by excess dilated blood vessels as a result to trauma to the skin. More common in fair skin types but can be experienced by all Fitzpatrick types.

500

Sebaceous Filaments

hardened oil in the follicles due to normal oil production. Commonly mistaken for blackheads on the nose.

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