Causes of dark circles under the eye.
It is often claimed that per orbital dark circles are caused
by tiredness or working too hard or even just staying up late. While this can
be true, the truth is that your genes play a huge role here. So what exactly is
happening when you get dark circles under or around your eyes?
Simply put, periorbital dark circles are a result of the
thin layer of skin below your eyes showing the blood vessels and the blood they
contain more clearly than anywhere else on your body. (this skin
around your eyelids, called periorbital skin, is on average about 0.5 mm thick
compared to an average of about 2 mm thick on most of the rest of your body.)
Now, as you may or may not already know, the reason veins
often look blue isn't because the blood inside them is blue; it's because your
skin/subcutaneous tissue only lets blue/violet wavelengths of light pass
through it. As a result, only blue light is reflected back and the veins look,
well, bluish. (Veins often won't appear blue if a person has darker or lighter
skin. Rather, the veins tend to appear green or brown. On the other hand,
people with extremely light skin, such as albinos, will typically have veins
that show up as dark purple or dark red, more closely resembling the actual colour
of the blood running through the veins.) Sinus congestion will add to the
puffiness.
It's the exact same concept with the skin below your eyes.
Those dark bluish circles are (usually) just the result of light being
reflected back off of the blood vessels sitting just below the surface of that
incredibly thin patch of skin. This is the same reason facial bruises are more
prominent below or around the eyes; the thin skin just shows the blood from the
ruptured blood vessels a little bit more clearly.
Again, as you may or may not know, as we age, our skin loses
its elasticity and ability to regenerate and as a result, it becomes thinner.
This is why more often than not, elderly people will have rather prominent
periorbital dark circles regardless of how much they sleep. As with those who
are genetically predisposed to having thinner skin below the eyes, it's just
biology.
Another thing that can cause dark circles beneath the eyes
is something known as periorbital hyper-pigmentation, which is basically a
condition that results in more melanin being produced by the skin below the
eyes, resulting in it appearing to be a darker colour. This is mostly a
condition that affects (or is at least more noticeable in) darker skinned
people.
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