Common Types of Milia
- Primary milia: These appear spontaneously and are common in adults and children, often around the eyes, cheeks, or forehead.
- Secondary milia: These develop after skin damage from sun exposure, burns, rashes, heavy creams, or cosmetic procedures.
- Neonatal milia: Very common in newborns (up to 50% of babies), but they usually resolve quickly.
Why They Often Appear Around the Eyes
The skin here is thinner and has fewer oil glands, making it easier for keratin to get trapped. Heavy eye creams, occlusive products, or even aging skin (which sheds cells more slowly) can contribute. Studies indicate that factors like prolonged sun exposure or using thick moisturizers increase the likelihood in adults.
Self-check: If you’ve been using rich creams or spending time in the sun without protection, that could be a clue.
Why Viral “Overnight” Mixes Like Vaseline + Scrubs Often Backfire
Social media is full of quick fixes—Vaseline mixed with baking soda, coffee scrubs, or honey masks—promising to dissolve milia overnight. But dermatologists warn these can do more harm than good.
Vaseline (petroleum jelly) is highly occlusive, meaning it seals everything in and prevents skin from breathing. For people prone to milia, this can trap more keratin and worsen the issue. Baking soda disrupts your skin’s natural pH, leading to dryness, redness, or irritation. Abrasive scrubs like coffee grounds can damage the delicate eye area.
Real talk: No strong evidence supports these DIY methods for removing milia, but irritation and scarring are well-documented risks. Patience with proven strategies beats risky shortcuts every time.
Safer Foundation: Gentle Exfoliation and Prevention Habits
The best approach starts with habits that promote natural skin turnover without irritation. Here’s what dermatologists recommend:
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