Melasma and pigmentation treatment for Middle-Eastern skin tones at Waleerat Bangkok
Clinical Guide · Skin of Colour·9 min read·2026-06-13

Melasma and pigmentation on Middle-Eastern skin — why Fitzpatrick IV–V needs a different protocol

In one paragraph

Middle-Eastern and Gulf skin tones (Fitzpatrick IV–V) pigment readily and are prone to post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation (PIH) — which means the aggressive laser settings used on lighter skin can make melasma worse, not better. The safer protocol prioritises sun protection and topical groundwork first, then conservative low-fluence toning (Pico or Q-switched) rather than high-energy ablation. This guide explains how melasma differs from sun spots and PIH, what works on darker skin, what to avoid, and realistic timelines. Melasma is managed, not cured — expectations matter as much as the device.

Skin type
Fitz IV–V
Approach
Conservative
Sessions
Multiple
Maintenance
Ongoing

01Why darker skin needs a different plan

Fitzpatrick IV–V skin — common across the Middle East and the Gulf — contains more active melanocytes that respond strongly to heat, friction, and inflammation. The same laser fluence that clears a spot on Fitzpatrick II skin can trigger a rebound of pigment on Fitzpatrick V.

This is why protocol matters more than device horsepower. On darker skin the goal is to calm pigment-producing cells, not to blast them — an over-energetic session risks post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation (PIH) that can last months.

The right plan is deliberately conservative and staged.

02Melasma vs sun spots vs post-inflammatory pigmentation

These three are routinely confused, and treating them as the same thing is the most common reason pigmentation gets worse.

  • Melasma — symmetric brown-grey patches on cheeks, forehead, upper lip; hormone- and heat-driven; chronic and relapsing. Needs gentle, sustained management.
  • Sun spots (solar lentigines) — discrete, well-defined spots from UV exposure; respond well to targeted laser and are the most straightforward to clear.
  • PIH — pigment left behind after acne, injury, or an over-aggressive treatment; common on darker skin; usually fades with time plus topicals and sun protection.
  • Mixed presentation is normal — many Gulf patients have melasma plus PIH plus a few sun spots at once, and each component is handled differently.

03What works on Fitzpatrick IV–V

The foundation is non-laser and comes first: daily broad-spectrum SPF 50, visible-light protection (tinted sunscreen with iron oxides), and a topical regimen the physician matches to your skin — typically combinations involving tranexamic acid, azelaic acid, and gentle tyrosinase-pathway agents. This groundwork alone improves many cases.

When a device is appropriate, low-fluence toning is the conservative standard: Pico or Q-switched lasers at gentle settings across multiple spaced sessions, designed to lighten pigment gradually without provoking PIH. A test patch is done first.

For some patients, oral tranexamic acid is considered by the physician where medically appropriate. The principle throughout: small, steady steps beat one aggressive session on darker skin.

04What to avoid

On Fitzpatrick IV–V, the wrong intervention can set you back months. These are the common pitfalls:

  • High-energy ablative or aggressive resurfacing lasers as a first move on melasma — high PIH risk.
  • Strong chemical peels without a test and without topical pre-conditioning.
  • Skipping daily sun protection — UV and even visible light reactivate melasma quickly.
  • Chasing a one-session cure — melasma is chronic; over-treating to rush it backfires.
  • Unregulated skin-whitening injections marketed for fast results — not a clinic-grade approach.

05Realistic timeline and maintenance

Expect improvement over months, not a single visit. Topical groundwork runs for several weeks before and alongside any laser; toning sessions are spaced (typically 3–4 weeks apart) to let skin settle between treatments.

Melasma is managed, not cured. Most patients reach a controlled baseline and then maintain it with sun protection and periodic topicals, with occasional gentle toning if pigment creeps back.

For Gulf patients traveling for treatment, the realistic plan is to start the groundwork before arrival and continue it at home — the device sessions are one part of a longer routine, not a standalone fix.

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06Common questions

Can melasma be cured permanently?+
No — melasma is a chronic, relapsing condition driven by hormones and heat/UV. It can be significantly lightened and then kept under control with sun protection and maintenance, but a permanent one-time cure is not realistic. Any clinic promising that is overstating what the condition allows.
Is laser safe for my skin tone if I'm Fitzpatrick IV or V?+
Yes, when the settings and approach are matched to darker skin. We use conservative low-fluence toning rather than high-energy ablation, do a test patch first, and build topical and sun-protection groundwork before any device. The risk on darker skin is an over-aggressive setting, which the protocol is specifically designed to avoid.
How is melasma different from the dark marks left by acne?+
Acne marks are post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation (PIH) — pigment left after inflammation, which usually fades with topicals, time, and sun protection. Melasma is hormone- and heat-driven, symmetric, and relapsing. They often coexist on Gulf skin and are treated differently, which is why diagnosis comes first.
How many sessions will I need?+
It varies by how much is melasma versus sun spots versus PIH, and by how your skin responds. Toning is done as a spaced series rather than a single session, alongside topicals. The physician sets a realistic count after assessing your skin and a test patch — and re-evaluates as it responds.
I'm visiting Bangkok for a short trip — can you fix my pigmentation in one visit?+
We can start the plan, do an assessment and test patch, and begin conservative treatment, but pigmentation on darker skin is managed over time, not resolved in a single visit. The honest approach is to begin the topical and sun-protection groundwork, do what is safe during your trip, and continue maintenance at home.
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