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What Are The Different Stages of Rosacea? A Complete Guide
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Rosacea is a chronic inflammatory skin condition that progresses through recognisable stages, each with its own clinical features and treatment priorities. Understanding which stage you’re in matters: the management of is largely lifestyle-driven, while severe rosacea with skin thickening (rhinophyma) needs combined laser and sometimes surgical intervention. The right depends on accurate staging.
This guide covers the four stages of rosacea, what they look like, what drives flare-ups (including the role of seasonal change), how to prevent progression, and the laser treatment available at Centre for Surgery’s Baker Street private hospital. We use the Fotona SP Dynamis Pro Nd:YAG and Er:YAG laser platform, which addresses both the vascular and textural components of .
What rosacea is — and isn’t
Rosacea is a chronic inflammatory condition of facial skin. It affects roughly 1% of the UK population, with onset most commonly between the ages of 30 and 50. Women are more often affected than men, but men tend to develop more severe disease, particularly the skin-thickening forms.
The exact cause is incompletely understood. understanding involves a combination of factors: dysfunction in the superficial blood vessels of the face (driven by elevated VEGF and increased vascular permeability), low-grade chronic inflammation involving inflammatory cytokines and the immune system, possible role of the Demodex skin mite in driving chronic forms, and a genetic predisposition that runs in families.
Rosacea is not:
For the visible symptoms patients most commonly notice — the persistent facial redness, the flushing episodes, the visible thread veins — see also our companion guide on , since the two conditions frequently overlap.
The four stages of rosacea
The earliest stage is characterised by occasional flushing — brief episodes of facial redness triggered by specific stimuli. Common triggers in this phase include exercise, hot drinks, spicy food, alcohol, embarrassment or stress, and sudden temperature changes. The redness resolves once the trigger is removed and there’s no lasting damage to the blood vessels.
Most pre-rosacea is unrecognised. Patients often describe themselves as "blushing easily" or "having sensitive skin" rather than having a skin condition. This is the stage where intervention is most and most preventive — establishing trigger awareness, sun protection, and gentle skincare can substantially delay progression to mild rosacea.
Other early indicators include skin sensitivity (a stinging or burning sensation with cleansers or water), occasional facial swelling around the eyes, and a tendency for the skin to feel hot during otherwise routine .
In the mild stage, the facial redness persists for longer — typically more than half an hour after a trigger — and starts to recur in the same locations even without an obvious provocation. The classic distribution is the central face: cheeks, nose, chin and central forehead.
Visible blood vessels — telangiectasia, also called thread veins — begin to appear. These are small dilated capillaries that show through the skin as fine red lines, often radiating across the nose and cheeks. Once thread veins have appeared they don’t fade on their own. They’re a sign that the underlying vascular changes are no longer fully reversible.
The skin in mild rosacea is more sensitive to skincare products and to environmental triggers. Sensitivity is often the symptom that drives patients to seek help. At this stage, dedicated laser therapy with long-pulsed Nd:YAG offers excellent control of both the redness and the visible vessels.
The moderate stage adds inflammatory lesions to the background redness. Small red papules and — raised bumps, some pus-filled — appear across the affected areas. The look similar to acne but with key differences: rosacea doesn’t produce or whiteheads, and the underlying skin between lesions is persistently red.
The redness in moderate rosacea is constant rather than episodic. Telangiectasia is more extensive. Patients often report or stinging sensations, particularly with cleansers and water. Facial swelling can develop, particularly around the cheeks and eyes.
This is the stage where misdiagnosis as acne is most common. The distinction matters because acne treatments (particularly benzoyl peroxide and aggressive retinoids) can worsen rosacea. The right treatment topical anti-inflammatories with laser therapy, with oral tetracycline antibiotics for their anti-inflammatory rather than antibacterial properties.
The most advanced stage involves structural skin changes. Phymatous rosacea — the chronic skin thickening that can develop in long-standing severe disease — most commonly affects the nose, producing the disfiguring enlargement known as rhinophyma. The condition is more common in men and can progress to a degree that impairs breathing in severe cases. Phymatous can also affect the chin, forehead, ears and eyelids, though less commonly.
Ocular rosacea is the second presentation in advanced disease. The eyes become red, watery and irritable. The eyelids can look inflamed (mimicking blepharitis), and patients describe a gritty or burning sensation. Ocular rosacea benefits from specialist ophthalmological co-management alongside skin treatment.
At this stage, laser therapy plays a central role. The Er:YAG component of the Fotona SP Dynamis Pro can be used to ablate the thickened tissue of , restoring contour. The Nd:YAG component to address the vascular and inflammatory components. For very advanced rhinophyma, surgical excision may be required alongside laser.
Rosacea triggers — what actually drives flares
Trigger management is one of the most powerful tools in rosacea control. The triggers themselves don’t cause rosacea, but they reliably worsen it in who already have the condition. UK survey data shows that sun exposure triggers flares in around 80% of patients, hot weather in around 70%, and windy conditions in around 60%.
Patients benefit from keeping a brief food diary alongside flare records for two to four weeks. The pattern usually becomes clear quickly, and elimination of the worst offenders often produces meaningful improvement.
Many and skincare products ingredients that irritate rosacea-prone skin:
Switch to products labelled "for sensitive skin" with short lists. Patch test new products on the inner forearm before applying to the face.
Seasonal patterns and how to manage them
Spring and summer are particularly challenging for sufferers. The combination of increased UV exposure, higher temperatures and higher humidity drives a measurable seasonal flare in most patients. Practical management:
Winter brings its own problems — cold wind exposure, indoor heating, hot drinks for warmth. A scarf or face covering outdoors and a barrier-protective moisturiser indoors help. Some patients find their improves in autumn and spring when conditions are milder.
Daily management — the prevention strategy
Even with effective in-clinic treatment, management drives long-term outcomes. The essentials:
Green-tinted primers neutralise the appearance of redness; non-comedogenic foundations formulated for sensitive skin provide cover without driving irritation. Mineral makeup is generally well tolerated. Avoid heavy waterproof formulations during active flares.
Rosacea is chronic. Periodic review with a clinician — adjusting regimens, planning maintenance laser sessions, escalating treatment if the pattern changes — is essential. alone tends to plateau.
Laser treatment for rosacea at Centre for Surgery
The Fotona SP Dynamis Pro is among the most sophisticated laser platforms for rosacea. We use long-pulsed Nd:YAG for the vascular component and Er:YAG for the component, sometimes both in the same session on the stage of disease.
The 1,064 nm wavelength is absorbed by oxyhaemoglobin in the dilated blood vessels of rosacea. Once absorbed, the energy generates a controlled thermal effect that collapses the wall of the vessel. The body then clears the closed vessel, redirecting blood flow to deeper, capillaries. The end result is reduced visible and elimination of thread veins.
The Nd:YAG also has effects that benefit rosacea: reduction of inflammatory mediators in the skin, antibacterial effect that helps clear the inflammatory papulopustular component, and collagen stimulation that improves the underlying skin quality.
For with phymatous changes — thickened skin on the nose or chin — the 2,940 nm Er:YAG wavelength ablates the surface tissue, restoring contour. Settings are based on the severity of the thickening, and treatment may be staged over multiple sessions for advanced rhinophyma.
A course is three to four sessions spaced four to six weeks apart. Each takes 30 to 45 . The sensation during treatment is comparable to a series of light elastic-band snaps; topical isn’t needed. cooling through the handpiece reduces discomfort further.
Mild redness for a few hours after treatment is normal. There’s no significant downtime — most return to work the same day. Strict daily SPF 50 for at least two weeks post-treatment is essential.
Patients typically see a 30–40% reduction in facial redness after a single session, with improvement across the course. Maintenance sessions every 12 to 18 months sustain the result. For detailed pricing and what’s included, see our dedicated guide.
Other treatment options
Laser is rarely the only treatment used. Most patients benefit from combination management:
Metronidazole, azelaic acid, ivermectin and brimonidine are the principal topical prescription options for rosacea. Each targets a different — anti-inflammatory, anti-Demodex, vasoconstrictive — and they’re often combined or rotated.
doxycycline (taken at low dose for its anti-inflammatory rather than antibacterial effect) is the most evidence-based oral option for papulopustular rosacea. Standard-dose are used short-term for severe flares. Isotretinoin at low dose is reserved for refractory or severe disease and is dermatologist-managed.
Intense Pulsed Light treatment is used as an alternative to laser, particularly for diffuse background redness. It tends to be less precise than Nd:YAG and is reserved for milder presentations or as a maintenance option between laser courses.
What we don’t recommend
Frequently asked questions
A course of three to four four to six weeks apart for initial control, followed by maintenance sessions every 12 to 18 months. Severity and skin type adjust the protocol.
No — most patients describe a brief snapping sensation against the skin. Cold-air cooling through the handpiece reduces it further. Topical anaesthetic isn’t typically needed.
No. Rosacea is a chronic condition that’s rather than cured. Treatment achieves remission and prevents progression. Maintenance is essential.
There’s a genetic component — first-degree relatives of rosacea sufferers have a higher rate of the condition. Lifestyle and environmental factors then determine expression.
For mild rosacea, identifying and eliminating dietary triggers plus sun protection can produce meaningful improvement. For moderate or severe disease, lifestyle alone is insufficient — medical treatment is needed .
Yes — Nd:YAG at 1,064 nm is among the safest laser wavelengths for Fitzpatrick types IV to VI because less of its energy is absorbed by melanin. We adjust settings and patch where appropriate.
Pricing depends on area treated (half-face vs full-face) and number of sessions. We offer course packages with reduced per-session . Full pricing breakdown is in our . is available through Chrysalis Finance.
Our laser specialists treat rosacea on the Fotona SP Dynamis Pro at our CQC-regulated Baker Street hospital. Every treatment plan is calibrated to the stage of your rosacea, your skin type, your trigger profile and your goals — there’s no one-size-fits-all rosacea protocol at our clinic. Treatment is integrated with topical prescription and management to address the condition comprehensively, not just symptomatically.
Centre for Surgery · CQC-regulated · GMC specialist-registered surgeons · · · ·
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Centre for Surgery is a CQC-regulated private hospital on London’s Baker Street, delivering plastic and cosmetic surgery through GMC-registered specialist surgeons. Our expertise spans facial procedures including and , , for men, and body contouring procedures such as and . Patient safety, surgical excellence and natural-looking results sit at the heart of everything we do.
Centre for Surgery is a CQC-regulated hospital on London’s iconic , offering plastic and surgery led by GMC-registered consultant surgeons.
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