If you have melanin-rich skin and you've ever been told to "just use hydroquinone" for your dark patches, you've probably learned the hard way that what works on light skin often makes things significantly worse on dark skin.
I see it in my practice every week. A patient comes in with hyperpigmentation. on her face, neck, underarms, thighs, anywhere her skin has been inflamed, irritated, or scarred. She's tried hydroquinone, sometimes for months. The patches didn't fade. In many cases, they came back darker. Some patients developed ochronosis, a permanent bluish-black discoloration that hydroquinone can cause specifically in melanin-rich skin.
This isn't a failure of effort. It's a failure of the products themselves to work with darker skin instead of against it.
After extensive review of clinical research and 14 years in dermatological practice, I've identified a botanical compound that addresses both mechanisms behind hyperpigmentation on dark skin, the surface melanin AND the underlying inflammation cycle, without the rebound darkening, skin thinning, or paradoxical pigmentation that hydroquinone causes on melanin-rich skin.