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작성자 Mireya
댓글 0건 조회 2회 작성일 26-07-11 02:23

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How to Get Rid of Crepey Skin


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Crepey skin is the thin, crinkled, paper-textured appearance that develops as the dermal structure weakens. It is distinct from wrinkles (deeper linear creases caused by facial expression) and from skin laxity (sagging caused by loss of elastic recoil and gravitational descent), though the three often coexist. Understanding which of these you are actually dealing with is the foundation of any sensible treatment plan — because the interventions that work for crepey skin are different from those that work for wrinkles or for significant skin laxity.


This guide explains what causes crepey skin, what works and what does not, and where the surgical and non-surgical options fit.



What crepey skin actually is


Crepey skin reflects structural change in the dermis — the thick supporting layer beneath the visible skin surface. The dermis contains collagen (providing strength) and elastin (providing elasticity), both produced by fibroblast cells. With age and cumulative damage, several changes occur:


The combined result is skin that has lost its plumpness, looks thin, and crinkles into the characteristic crepe-paper texture rather than maintaining its shape. Common locations: the décolletage, the inner upper arms, the upper eyelids, the neck, the inner thighs, and the dorsum of the hands.



What causes crepey skin


Sun damage is the dominant preventable cause. Ultraviolet radiation degrades collagen and elastin directly, generates free radicals that damage skin cells, and accelerates the natural ageing by decades in heavily exposed areas. The difference between sun-protected skin (under clothing) and sun-exposed skin (face, hands, neckline) on the same person is often striking — the inner upper arm what skin would look like UV exposure.


Age. The biological decline in collagen and elastin production is inevitable, though the rate varies considerably between individuals based on genetics, lifestyle, and cumulative environmental exposure.


Hormonal changes. Oestrogen supports production in women; the decline at menopause collagen loss . Some research shows a 30% loss of skin collagen in the first five years after menopause.


Significant weight lossparticularly rapid loss — leaves the dermis stretched and unable to fully recoil. The skin is now too large for the reduced underlying volume. GLP-1 weight loss medications and post-bariatric weight loss are common contemporary causes.


Smoking and vaping. Nicotine reduces dermal blood flow; smoking specifically damages collagen and and accelerates skin ageing markedly. See and .


Dehydration and poor nutrition. low-grade and protein-poor diets contribute to dermal thinning. Sustained low intake during weight loss is a particular risk.


Some medicationslong-term oral steroids notablyproduce dermal thinning as a side effect.



Crepey skin versus wrinkles versus skin laxity


Three different problems, three different treatments. Important to distinguish:


Most patients have a combination. Pure crepey skin without any laxity is unusual; pure laxity without any crepe-texture surface is also unusual. Treatment plans should address the actual mix rather than picking one component.



Topical and lifestyle approaches


The foundation of any crepey skin programme. None of these will produce dramatic transformation, but consistent application across years produces meaningfully better skin than ignoring these factors.


Daily broad-spectrum SPF 30+ — the single highest-yield intervention for preventing further crepey skin development. UV exposure adds up across decades.


Topical retinoids (tretinoin, retinol, retinaldehyde) — the best-evidenced topical actives for dermal collagen and reducing crepey appearance. Tretinoin is prescription-strength; retinol products work more slowly but with less irritation. Effects build over 3-12 months of consistent use.


Vitamin C serumprovides antioxidant protection and supports collagen synthesis. L-ascorbic acid at 10-20% concentration in a stable formulation, applied in the morning under sunscreen, is the standard approach.


Hyaluronic acid serumsimprove surface hydration and short-term plumpness. Useful as part of a regimen, but do not address the underlying dermal change.


Niacinamidesupports barrier function and reduces redness. Well-tolerated across skin types.


Nutritional support. Adequate protein intake (1.2-1.6g/kg body weight daily), particularly during weight loss, supports collagen synthesis. Vitamin C, zinc, and adequate hydration matter. Vitamin D status is worth checking.


Stop and vaping. Nothing topical will counteract the dermal damage of ongoing nicotine use.


Gradual weight loss where weight loss is a goal — 0.5-1kg per week allows the skin some opportunity to recoil. Rapid loss exceeds the skin’s capacity.



Non-surgical procedural treatments


For established crepey skin where topicals alone are not enough, several procedural treatments dermal collagen production:


combines two collagen-stimulating mechanisms in a single treatment: microneedles create controlled micro-injuries that trigger the wound healing response, and radiofrequency energy delivered through the needles heats the deeper dermis to stimulate further collagen remodelling. The combined effect is well-suited to crepey skin on the face, neck, décolletage, inner upper arms, and .


Treatment courses typically involve 3-4 spaced 4-6 weeks apart. Results emerge gradually over 3-6 months as new collagen organises. Recovery is short — pinpoint bleeding and redness for 1-2 days, full social downtime usually under 48 hours.


For larger body areas, uses deeper-penetration designed for thicker body skin.


is a multi-mode laser treatment combining four laser in one session to address skin from angles — surface texture, deeper collagen, and (via the intra-oral component) the underlying support structures of the face. Particularly suited to early-to-moderate crepey skin where the prefers a non-invasive option with very short downtime.


Courses typically involve 4 sessions spaced 3-4 weeks apart, with results building over 3-6 months.


for the face and for body areas use radiofrequency-assisted lipolysis (RFAL). A small probe is inserted under the skin to deliver energy from beneath while a corresponding external electrode delivers energy from above. The heat both melts small amounts of fat and substantially tightens overlying skin through collagen stimulation.


These treatments sit between non-invasive devices (Morpheus8, Fotona 4D) and full surgical excision. Recovery is 5-10 days for swelling and tenderness; results build over 3-6 months. Particularly useful for moderate skin laxity with crepey texture.


combines two laser wavelengths to produce both modest fat reduction and skin . Useful for smaller body areas with mild crepey skin and a small amount of fat. Multiple sessions required; recovery is minimal.


Hyaluronic acid skin booster injections (different from filler — these are thinner formulations injected into the upper dermis rather than placed deeper) improve skin quality, hydration, and the surface texture of crepey skin. Particularly useful for the décolletage, inner upper arms, and dorsum of the hands. Treatment is typically a course of 2-3 sessions with maintenance every 6-12 months.



Surgical approaches


Where crepey skin coexists with significant laxity — loose, hanging skin that does not retractenergy-based treatments are . Surgical excision is the appropriate intervention.


Crepey skin on the face and neck, when combined with descent and laxity, is appropriately treated by and . The surgery repositions descended tissue, removes redundant skin, and tightens the underlying SMAS layer. The surface crepey often improves as the redundant tissue is removed and Nasolabial Fold (Smile Line Fillers) [idinhealth.com] the remaining skin is .


Facelift alone does not address the deepest dermal changespatients sometimes from a combination of facelift surgery with subsequent energy-based treatments for residual surface texture issues at 3-6 months post-op.


Crepey upper eyelid skin is one of the most reliably improved by surgery. removes the redundant, crepey skin directly, with the incision hidden in the natural lid crease.


The inner upper arm is one of the most common locations for crepey skin with laxity, particularly after weight loss or in older patients. directly removes the redundant skin and produces a smoother, firmer contour. The trade-off is a scar that runs along the inner upper arm — visible when the arm is raised but well-concealed in normal positioning.


The inner thighs follow a similar pattern. removes the redundant crepey skin from the inner thigh, with the scar placed in the groin crease. Useful where there is genuine excess skin rather than only crepe texture.


Crepey skin on the abdomen, particularly post-pregnancy or post-weight-loss, is appropriately addressed by . Surface treatments alone are inadequate where the skin envelope is significantly .


For patients with significant crepey skin and laxity across multiple body areas after major weight loss, a or staged approach addresses the whole circumference rather than individual segments.



Matching treatment to severity


Practical mapping of treatment to clinical situation:



What doesn’t work meaningfully



FAQs


Can crepey skin be reversed? Improved, yes. Fully reversed to youthful skin, no. The dermal changes are progressive and treatments slow and reverse them rather than restoring baseline.


What is the best treatment for crepey skin on the décolletage? of daily SPF, topical retinoid (gentle formulation for thinner chest skin), and a course of Morpheus8 or skin boosters. Surgery has limited role in this specific area.


What about crepey skin on the inner arms? Depends on severity. Mild crepe without laxity responds to Morpheus8 Body or BodyTite. Significant laxity needs arm lift surgery.


How long do non-surgical last? Variable by treatment. Morpheus8 results last 1-2 years with maintenance. Surgical results are permanent (though aging continues).


Can I prevent crepey skin? delay it, yes — through consistent sun protection, not smoking, balanced nutrition, and actives from the late 20s onward. The intrinsic biological ageing component cannot be prevented but can be .



Booking a consultation


The right approach to crepey skin depends on the specific pattern and severity in your case. A can establish what you are actually dealing with and which treatments will produce results. Call or use the to arrange a consultation at our .


Centre for Surgery · CQC-regulated · GMC specialist-registered surgeons · · · ·


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Centre for Surgery is a CQC-regulated private hospital on London’s Baker Street, delivering plastic and cosmetic surgery through specialist surgeons. Our expertise spans facial procedures including and , , for men, and body contouring procedures such as and . Patient safety, surgical excellence and natural-looking results sit at the heart of everything we do.


Centre for Surgery is a CQC-regulated private hospital on London’s iconic , offering plastic and cosmetic surgery led by GMC-registered .




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