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Melacare Forte Cream (Hydroquinone/Tretinoin/Mometasone)

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Price range: $12.00 through $105.00

Melacare Forte Cream (Hydroquinone/Tretinoin/Mometasone) is a prescription triple-combination cream used for the treatment of melasma and stubborn dark patches. It pairs a pigment reducer, a retinoid that speeds skin turnover, and a calming steroid to reduce redness. Results are gradual over weeks, and irritation can happen, so use only as directed and protect your skin from the sun.

Active Ingredient: Hydroquinone/Tretinoin/Mometasone
Indication: Melasma
Manufacturer: Ajanta Pharma Ltd
Packaging: 25g in Tube
Strength: 20g
Delivery Time: 6 To 15 days
In Stock

Melacare Forte Cream (Hydroquinone/Tretinoin/Mometasone)

Variant Price Units Quantity Add to Cart
1 Cream $12.00 $12 / Cream
3 Cream/s $30.00 $10 / Cream
6 Cream/s $58.00 $9.67 / Cream
12 Cream/s $105.00 $8.75 / Cream
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Shop Melacare Forte Cream (Hydroquinone/Tretinoin/Mometasone)

Melacare Forte Cream (Hydroquinone/Tretinoin/Mometasone) is one of those treatments people usually look up after they have tried regular "dark spot correctors" and still see uneven tone in the mirror. It is not a basic cosmetic brightening cream. It is a prescription-strength, triple-combination formula commonly used for melasma and other stubborn, patchy, slow-to-fade forms of hyperpigmentation.

What Melacare Forte Cream is used for

Clinicians often prescribe this type of triple-combo cream for:
  • Melasma (brown or gray-brown patches, often on cheeks, forehead, upper lip)
  • Post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation (PIH), such as marks that linger after acne
  • Sun-related dark patches or uneven tone that do not respond well to over-the-counter options
People commonly search terms like "melasma cream," "hydroquinone tretinoin mometasone cream," "prescription dark spot treatment," and "fade acne marks fast." This product falls into that prescription category because its ingredients are potent and require a proper plan.

How the three ingredients work

This cream combines three active medicines that each do a different job:
  • Hydroquinone: Helps reduce excess pigment production. This is why it is often chosen for dark patches and discoloration.
  • Tretinoin: A vitamin A derivative (retinoid) that increases skin cell turnover. It can help dark pigment clear more evenly over time and can also improve rough texture.
  • Mometasone: A topical corticosteroid that helps calm inflammation. It is included because hydroquinone and tretinoin can be irritating, and irritation can make pigmentation look worse in some people.
Because it includes a steroid, this is generally meant for short-term, monitored use, not as a daily long-term brightening routine.

What to expect when using it

Most people do not see a dramatic change overnight. With pigment concerns like melasma, improvement is usually gradual over several weeks. Some days, the skin can look drier, a bit flakier, or mildly red, especially early on. That does not automatically mean something is "wrong," but you should take irritation with this kind of formula seriously. If you notice intense burning, swelling, blistering, crusting, or worsening discoloration, it is safer to pause and ask your prescriber what to do next. Triple-combination creams can cause problems if used too often, for too long, or applied to the wrong areas.

How it is typically applied

Follow your prescription label first, since directions vary. In many treatment plans, it is applied:
  • In a skinny layer
  • Often once daily, commonly at night
  • Focused on affected areas, not as an all-over face cream unless your prescriber instructs that
Try to keep it away from the eyes, the corners of the nose, and the lips unless your clinician directs otherwise. Do not apply to broken skin, open cuts, or active infections.

Important safety notes people often miss

Because this cream contains hydroquinone and a topical steroid, it is not the kind of product you casually "keep using to maintain results." Overuse can raise the risk of side effects such as skin thinning, visible tiny blood vessels, acne-like bumps, rebound discoloration, or other irritation patterns. Rarely, long-term or improper use of hydroquinone has been associated with difficult-to-treat darkening (exogenous ochronosis). If you are unsure how long your course should be, ask before extending it. Also, tretinoin can make skin more sensitive. Sun exposure is one of the biggest triggers for melasma returning, so daily sun protection is usually part of any melasma plan. If your routine does not include that, results often do not hold.

Available Strengths

Melacare Forte Cream (Hydroquinone/Tretinoin/Mometasone) is sold in different compositions depending on the specific product version and manufacturer. Labels vary, so always confirm what your tube contains. Commonly seen triple-combination strengths include:
  • Eukroma Plus Cream 20gm (Hydroquinone /Tretinoin /Mometasone)
  • Hydroquinone 2% / Tretinoin 0.025% / Mometasone furoate 0.1%
  • Hydroquinone 4% / Tretinoin 0.05% / Mometasone furoate 0.1%
  • Some markets also offer combinations in which the hydroquinone or tretinoin percentage differs. Your prescriber chooses based on your skin type, the cause of pigmentation, and how sensitive your skin is.

FAQs About Melacare Forte Cream

1. How should I store Melacare Forte Cream? Store at room temperature, away from heat and moisture. Avoid leaving it in a hot car or near a steamy shower. Keep the cap tightly closed. 2. What if I forget to apply a dose? Apply it the next time you usually would. Do not "double up" to make up for a missed application, since that can increase irritation. 3. Can I use a moisturizer with this cream? Many people do, but timing matters and depends on how sensitive your skin is. Ask your prescriber whether to moisturize before or after, and which types are least likely to sting. 4. Can Melacare Forte Cream be used on the body (underarms, knees, elbows)? It might be prescribed for specific body areas, but those areas may react differently and be more prone to irritation. Use only if your clinician recommends it explicitly for that location. 5. Should I stop this cream before waxing, laser, or chemical peels? Often, yes, because tretinoin can increase irritation with procedures. The exact stop-and-restart timeline depends on the procedure, so it is best to confirm with the provider performing it.
size1 Cream, 12 Cream/s, 3 Cream/s, 6 Cream/s

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