Intensive Care

Intensive Care is not maintenance.
It is intervention.

A focused recovery protocol designed for acute sensitivity, post-treatment instability, and visible inflammation — when your skin needs immediate stabilization before anything else.

Shop the Intensive Care

What does true Intensive Care mean?

Acute skin distress is not just “redness.”

It is a destabilized barrier response —
where inflammation, hydration loss, and reactivity accelerate together.

Intensive Care means interrupting that cycle early.

• Immediate calming of inflammatory triggers
• Prevention of further barrier disruption
• Controlled recovery without overstimulation
• Restoring tolerance before introducing active treatments

  • 1. Stabilize the Environment

    Inflamed skin cannot regenerate properly.

    The first priority is reducing inflammatory signaling and calming surface reactivity.

    • Lower visible redness
    • Reduce heat and stinging
    • Prevent further barrier disruption

  • 2. Reactivate Repair Signaling

    Once inflammation is controlled,
    regenerative pathways must be supported.

    PDRN (polynucleotide) encourages DNA-level recovery signaling, helping skin initiate structured repair.

    • Support cellular renewal
    • Improve tissue recovery speed
    • Strengthen structural integrity

  • 3. Enhance Cellular Communication

    Exosome supports intercellular communication —

    accelerating recovery and improving resilience during regeneration.

    • Improve visible texture
    • Reduce recovery downtime
    • Promote long-term skin stability

  • 4. Seal & Protect

    Regeneration without protection leads to relapse.

    Barrier reinforcement ensures the skin remains stable while repair continues.

    • Reduce
    Reduce transepidermal water loss (TEWL)
    • Protect against external triggers
    • Maintain recovery progress

Intensive recovery is controlled


Skin in acute distress requires stabilization first, then structured regenerative signaling.

  • 🥇 Week 1 — Inflammation Stabilizes


    • Redness reduces
    • Skin feels less reactive
    • Surface heat decreases

  • 🥈 Week 3 — Structural Repair Begins


    • Texture appears smoother
    • Flare-ups reduce in intensity
    • Recovery between stress cycles improves

  • 🥉 Week 6 — Regenerative Baseline


    • Skin tolerates actives again
    • Barrier integrity improves
    • Visible resilience returns

Best For


✓ Post-laser, microneedling, or clinical procedures

✓ Sudden redness or inflammatory flare-ups

✓ When targeted regeneration is required

The Regenerative Phase

When stability is achieved,

advanced Korean protocols activate:

• Exosome-derived signaling pathways

• PDRN-driven DNA support

• Controlled micro-environment repair

• Dermal structure reinforcement

This is not surface improvement.

It is internal reconstruction.

Understand Controlled Regeneration