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Skin Care Medication Side Effects, Risks, and Interactions
Local and Systemic Effects
Topical medicines can still cause important adverse effects. Irritation, burning, dryness, peeling, rash, contact allergy, changes in pigmentation, photosensitivity, or worsening inflammation can occur. Some medicines may be absorbed through the skin, especially when used on large areas, broken skin, under occlusion, for long periods, or in infants and young children.
Higher-Risk Situations
Extra caution is needed with topical steroids, retinoids, antimicrobial products, skin-lightening agents, acne medicines, medicated shampoos, and treatments used near the eyes or on genital skin. Products that seem similar may have different strengths, vehicles, preservatives, or instructions.
Medicine Interactions and Practical Safety
Combining several topical products can increase irritation or reduce tolerability. Photosensitizing medicines may require sun protection. A person should follow the labelled amount, application site, frequency, and duration, and should not use another person’s prescription skin medicine.
When to Seek Medical Advice
Prompt medical advice is appropriate for severe swelling, blistering, signs of infection, eye involvement, spreading rash, breathing difficulty, faintness, or symptoms after accidental ingestion. Persistent or recurrent skin symptoms also need diagnosis rather than repeated unsupervised treatment.
Disclaimer: This article is for general information about medicine risks and does not replace medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Side effects, interactions, monitoring needs, and legal status can vary by medicine, person, and country. A qualified healthcare professional should be consulted before starting, stopping, or changing treatment. Skin medicines differ by ingredient, strength, site of use, pregnancy or breastfeeding precautions, irritation risk, and systemic absorption.