“My skin becomes irritated easily.”
A recurring low-grade reaction to products, weather or friction that healthy skin tolerates.
↗A skin that reacts to almost anything — stinging with new products, flushing in the wind, tightening after a shower. Under it, a weakened barrier. The pathway is calm: rebuild, protect, minimise.
Sensitive skin is a condition in which the skin reacts excessively to external or internal factors. It may present with irritation, redness or discomfort even after mild exposure.
It is often associated with a weakened skin barrier — the outermost defensive layer that keeps water in and irritants out. The pathway is a rebuild, not a suppression.
“Sensitive skin isn't fragile — it's inflamed. The barrier is the first thing we protect and the last thing we test.”
Symptoms named in the patient's own words alongside the clinical read.
A recurring low-grade reaction to products, weather or friction that healthy skin tolerates.
↗Sensory symptoms without visible cause — often the first sign of an impaired barrier.
↗Delayed erythema hours after introducing a serum, sunscreen or cleanser.
↗Cycle of trial and reaction — usually driven by aggressive ingredients or too many actives.
↗Transepidermal water loss above baseline — the barrier isn't holding water.
↗Climate-triggered flushing suggests vascular reactivity underlying the sensitivity.
↗Sensitive skin has multiple drivers — we identify which one before deciding the pathway.
Sensitive skin is diagnosed by history and clinical evaluation — VISIA imaging shows the underlying damage patterns.
Rebuild the barrier, remove the irritants, keep the routine minimal until the skin can tolerate more.
Barrier-repair formulations rebuild the lipid layer — paired with a stripped-back routine that removes the ingredients driving the reaction.
Deep hydration when the barrier is stable enough to tolerate it.
Supportive · HA hydrationHyaluronic acid to support skin hydration once the barrier is rebuilt.
Supportive · NourishmentVitamin infusion to support skin quality — introduced late in the course.
Supportive · Trigger managementSPF, avoidance of alcohol/fragrance/strong acids, minimal cleansing.
A specialist assesses barrier function, reviews your skincare history, and lays out a routine simple enough to stop the cycle of reactions.