The In-Clinic Difference:
How Acne Extractions, Chemical Peels & LED Therapy Work Together
A solid skincare routine and the right medication can carry a lot of the work — but some breakouts respond faster, and heal cleaner, with the help of in-office treatment. Here's what that actually looks like at Florida Institute of Dermatology.
Why In-Office Treatment Complements Your Skincare Routine
At-home products work gradually, over weeks. In-clinic treatments can reach congestion and inflammation more directly, in a controlled setting, using tools and techniques that aren't available for home use. Used alongside a skincare or medication plan, they often shorten the time to visible improvement.
Acne Extractions — Clearing What Products Can't
Professional acne extractions remove built-up congestion — blackheads, whiteheads, and trapped debris — using sterile techniques designed to minimize skin trauma. When done by a trained provider, this reduces the risk of scarring and irritation that come with at-home picking, while calming visible breakouts faster.
Chemical Peels — Resetting Skin Texture and Tone
Chemical peels use a controlled exfoliating solution to remove the outer layer of dull, congested skin. For acne-prone skin, this means clearer pores, a more even tone, and a visible improvement in texture. Peels are typically done as a series, spaced to allow the skin to recover between sessions.
LED Light Therapy — Calming Inflammation, Supporting Repair
LED Light Therapy uses targeted wavelengths of light to reduce inflammation and support the skin's natural healing process.
It's a gentle, non-invasive option that pairs well with extractions or peels, helping calm redness and irritation after a treatment session.
Building a Treatment Plan That Fits You
These three treatments aren't interchangeable — they address different parts of the acne cycle, and the right combination depends on skin type, breakout severity, and how the skin has responded to treatment so far. A consultation at Florida Institute of Dermatology is the best way to find out which combination — and what cadence — makes sense for your skin.
Ready to see what an in-clinic acne plan could do for you?