Senile purpura bruises and treatment options
I ( and a friend or 2) love gardening. Even with wearing long sleeves while working outside, (today it was about 76 degrees by 8 AM here), I still get poked or scratched. The resulting bleeds and the bruises are way out of proportion to the cause. Anybody have a good suggestion how to cover up some of the bruises on my lower arms (elbow to wrist) so I don’t look so abused when going out in public? Meaning, make-up tricks. Tomorrow it will be around 94 degrees again here, so long sleeves out and about are not what I want to wear going forward.
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@jk If I slightly bump my arms from the elbow down to my hands, the skin wrinkles and then bleeds. I'm told this is from aging skin that had too much sun exposure.
Thanks for mentioning the diclosfenac. I'd not heard of it, but see that the side effects are all current issues for me so I hesitate. Comments?
Hi, @notmoff
I am truly sorry, I named the wrong medication. The medication gel that was prescribed for me was tretinoin. When you mentioned side effects I looked up Voltaren to see what they were and knew immediately I had mentioned an incorrect drug. I was prescribed both of these in the spring of 2019, thus my confusion. Voltaren is for arthritis primarily. It was prescribed for me for bursitis.
Tretinoin is basically Retin A and is most often used for acne but can also be used to help with purpura. Another cream used for purpura is Dermend which is OTC.
This is a fairly good article about tretinoin.
https://ro.co/health-guide/tretinoin-what-is-it-and-what-skin-conditions-can-it-treat/
One thing about tretinoin is that if you are on Medicare it is not covered because it is considered to be "cosmetic". If you use an app like GoodRx you can find much affordable prices.
I hope one of these will help you. Tretinoin did help with my purpura. It did not totally take them away but I had fewer spots and they were not as dark.
Again, I apologize for naming the wrong drug.
JK
JK - All is well (and content). Thanks for so promptly clarifying the medication mixup for me. The article you attached was thorough and helpful
And again, thanks for the suggestion. I understand it is $100 for a 6 month supply but worth it due to its efficacy.
I hear you and have had the same problem. I wear long sleeve loosely fitted Cotten shirts. They seem to help deflect and not snag through to my skin. Both my husband and I use Corium 21 unscented cream. Use it sparingly 2x a day it soaks into the skin and actually will show an amazing difference in one month. I say use sparingly as less is best. It is expensive but worth every dime. You can find it on Amazon. Buy the 8 Oz jar. You can return it but give it time.
Best to you, Jilly
@jilliemo12345 Hi, Jill. Thanks, Corium 21 works for purpura? I haven't heard of that before but maybe I will try it. My purpura were pretty much gone for a while but right now they are back.
JK
Since about 1980 I have used Tretinoin (Retin A) cream on both my face and my arms to combat brown or red areas of discoloration. It seems to work by speeding up cell renewal. You may at first see what appears to be a lighter layer of outer skin over the dark spots. I am a Costco member, and their member price is the lowest I have found for Tretinoin, even lower than Good Rx. I also find it helpful to use twice daily a good moisturizer cream on my face and once daily a lotion like Amlactin or CeraVe on my arms and legs.
Did the Tretinoin work for you? I was using it for a while, and my bruising improved, but then it stopped working. I am using DermEnd also, but it doesn’t seem to help. But thanks for the tip about using Dermablend, I may have to try it.
My 89 year old husband has had purpura for years (also 3 bouts of skin cancer on his legs). His purpura will sometimes start bleeding for no reason - a fairly large amount running down his leg and onto the floor. Usually he isn't aware of it until he sees the blood - therefore no pain.
He does have a low blood count. Same thing will happen on his arms.
Doctors don't seem concerned about it and haven't mentioned any treatment, just say it is part of aging. While at one doctor appointment one of the spots on his leg started bleeding so the doctor got to see rather than just have it reported on. He bandaged him up and that was that.
I used to buy expensive arm protectors to wear when gardening. I live in Hawaii so it is too hot to wear a thick enough long sleeve shirt all the time. Now I take an old tube sock or any thick sock and cut off the toe portion and then slip it on my arm from my wrist to my elbow. Problem solved! For red spots that I get from bumping into things in the house, when my arms are not protected, I do use make up to cover them when I have to go out in public. But mostly I just ignore them. I am 74 years old and not that vain anymore!
@liene Tretinoin did help with the purpura. It did not totally eliminate it but it did make it less noticeable and I had fewer spots. Currently I am not using anything but I do have fewer spots for some reason.
I did not get Dermablend for my son's wedding, I just got a dress with long sleeves.
JK