The National Rosacea Society recently released a study highlighting results that dispell the common myth that rosacea typically affects adults age 30–50. The study also found the skin disorder may develop new signs and symptoms decades after its initial onset. 888-662-5874
Rosacea Continues to Baffle
May 16, 2008
Close
Thank you for your inquiry. Please note that the author cannot provide individual medical advice. Also, if you have a customer service question, email customer service at customerservice@skininc.com
Fill out my online form.
Sponsored
How To Use Mandelic To Renew The Skin In 2021
— Rhonda Allison / RA for Men
Creating Confidence starts in the Treatment Room
— Danne Montague-King-DMK
LYCON Wax Pinkini Brazilian Care Collection is made for comfort
— Lycon Wax
Achieve Glowing, Hydrated Skin with New Plant-Based Hydrating Enzyme Mask
— Face Reality Skin Care / Acne Clinic
Goodbye Breakouts, Hello M.A.D Skincare [Enter to Win] — M.A. Dermaceuticals
Sponsored
Most Popular in Physiology
- 1The Body Electric
- 2What Makes Asian Skin Different?
- 3New Study Shows How Skin Temperature Can Affect Sleep
- 4Counteracting Hormone and Chemotherapy Skin Aging
- 5The Fitzpatrick Skin Type Classification Scale
- 6Red Alert: Rosacea Could Signal Other Health Risks
- 7Glycation and the Skin
- 8Inflammaging: Changing the Face of Skin Care
- 9Hot and Bothered: Treating Reactive Skin
- 105 Myths of Redheads’ Skin Exposed
Related Content
- Spotting and Treating Combo Skin
8/26/2020, Pier Rogers - Study Suggests Probiotic Skin Therapy Improves Eczema in Children
9/14/2020, Michele Behrens - The Microbiome: Gateway to the Skin's Ecosystem
11/4/2020, Erin Madigan-Fleck, N.M.D - P&G, 23andMe Uncover Genetic Ties to Sensitive Skin
6/25/2020, Rachel Grabenhofer - Could the Human Virome be the Next Skin Care Target?
5/27/2020, Marisa Meloni, Ph.D., and Roberto Ferrari, Ph.D., VitroScreen; John Jiménez, Belcorp Colombia; and Rachel Grabenhofer, Cosmetics & Toiletries
Follow us: