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Rosaceasymptoms and AI scan guidance.

A recurring facial pattern that can include flushing, sensitivity, visible vessels, bumps, pustules, or eye irritation.

Condition report

Rosacea

Primary context

Facial redness and flushing pattern

Urgency range

Doctor soon

Best scan note

Take a natural-light front-facing photo and note recent triggers, heat exposure, and eye symptoms.

This page explains visible patterns and triage context. It does not diagnose, prescribe, or rule out serious disease.

Overview

What this pattern can mean.

DermAI does not diagnose.

The product provides wellness information, probability estimates, and urgency guidance. Seek qualified medical care for diagnosis, treatment, rapidly changing symptoms, severe pain, fever, bleeding, infection signs, or any urgent concern.

Rosacea often lives in the confusing space between acne, sensitive skin, sun reaction, seborrheic dermatitis, and product irritation. A scan can help structure visible clues, but triggers, flushing history, eye symptoms, and product use matter as much as a single photo.

DermAI should avoid calling every facial breakout acne. When cheeks, nose, chin, or forehead show persistent redness, burning, sensitivity, visible vessels, or acne-like bumps without comedones, the report should keep rosacea in the differential and recommend professional review for persistent or eye-related symptoms.

Visible cues

  • Central facial redness, flushing, sensitivity, or burning.
  • Acne-like bumps without obvious blackheads or whiteheads.
  • Visible small blood vessels or recurring cheek and nose involvement.
  • Possible eye irritation, gritty feeling, or eyelid inflammation in notes.

What DermAI checks

  • Checks central-face distribution and separates bumps from acne comedones.
  • Uses symptom notes about flushing, burning, alcohol, heat, spice, sun, or stress triggers.
  • Flags eye symptoms or rapid changes as reasons to involve a clinician.

Next steps

  • Use gentle skin care and avoid known triggers while tracking flare context.
  • Protect from sun exposure and avoid harsh exfoliation during active flares.
  • See a dermatologist for persistent redness, eye symptoms, or repeated acne-like facial flares.

When to seek care

  • Eye pain, light sensitivity, gritty eyes, or eyelid swelling.
  • Persistent facial redness or thickening skin.
  • Sudden painful swelling or infection signs.

Choose urgent medical care over an app workflow for severe pain, rapidly spreading symptoms, fever, breathing difficulty, eye involvement, deep wounds, significant swelling, or anything that feels unsafe.

Safe self-care framing

  • Use fragrance-free cleanser and moisturizer.
  • Use broad-spectrum sun protection when appropriate.
  • Track triggers rather than changing many products at once.

Better photo guidance

Take a natural-light front-facing photo and note recent triggers, heat exposure, and eye symptoms.

Scan with context

A clear report starts with a clear photo and honest uncertainty.

Capture context for rosacea-like symptoms and get a cautious report that explains confidence, urgency, and next steps.