Rosacea treatment depends on symptoms
Rosacea care should match the patient's pattern. Acne-like bumps, redness, flushing, sensitivity, and visible vessels are not treated identically.
The American Academy of Dermatology lists options for acne-like rosacea breakouts including azelaic acid, ivermectin, metronidazole, encapsulated benzoyl peroxide, minocycline foam, and low-dose doxycycline depending on the case.
These are tools, not automatic answers
Azelaic acid, metronidazole, and ivermectin can be useful in selected rosacea patterns, but patient factors, pregnancy status, irritation, prior response, and diagnosis all matter.
Redness may need a different plan
The American Academy of Dermatology notes that persistent facial redness may be treated with medications such as brimonidine gel or oxymetazoline cream, while visible vessels may require laser or light-based procedures.
How CutisRx fits
CutisRx starts with the rosacea concern, intake, and photos so treatment recommendations follow review when clinically appropriate.
Available in eligible U.S. states except Alaska, Mississippi, and New Jersey.
FAQ
Is azelaic acid only for rosacea?
No. It may be used in several skin concerns, but its role depends on the diagnosis.
Is ivermectin for every rosacea patient?
No. It is one possible option for selected rosacea patterns.
Can redness creams fix visible vessels?
Not usually. Visible vessels may require procedural treatment.