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Scar - Mole Removal
Normal scars are flat and in most cases become imperceptible with time. Objectionable scars come in two types: keloidal and hypertrophic vs. atrophic. Keloids and hypertrophic scars are confined to the original injury and increase in size by pushing outward rather by invading normal tissue. Keloids consist of scar tissue that extends beyond the confines of the original wound. Acne scars are examples of atrophic scars.
Keloids and Hypertrophic Scars
Keloids tend to occur in families and between the ages of 10 and 30 years. African Americans and Asians are affected more often than Caucasians. The tendency to form keloids is most pronounced on the chest, back, shoulder, and the back of the neck. In contrast, hypertrophic scars occur anywhere on the body with equal frequencies. Keloids persist over time and may worsen after surgery whereas hypertrophic scars tend to improve spontaneously and also with surgery.
Injections of corticosteroid are the number one treatment for these scars. Surgical excision is attempted next. Surgery is best avoided on certain types of keloid on the chest however. During surgery we generally try to reorient the scars with the skin tension lines to minimize tension on the wound. A variety of other modalities is used in conjunction with the surgery to improve the outcome: silicone gel application, radiation (especially for keloids), acid or TCA peel, and CO2 resurfacing/dermabrasion. Research is continuing in the use of lasers in scar management.
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| Before Extremely uneven scar following car accident. |
Before Same patient, oblique view |
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| After Scar Revision and CO2 laser resurfacing |
After Same patient, oblique view |
Just wanted to say thank you and let you know how grateful I am of the procedures that you did on my face after my accident. The whole office was extremely kind during those hard times for me.
Atrophic and Acne Scars
Atrophic scarring is the result of an inflammatory response that terminates in fibrosis and indentation. These are the three basic types of acne scars:
a) boxcars
b) ice pick
c) rolling scars
The best treatment for acne scars is prevention. For this there is a range treatments from long term topical or systemic antibiotics, Retin-A cream, Benzoyl peroxide, oral contraceptives to Accutane. We have had good success with IPL combined with Levulan in terms of acne control
Essentially scars that improve with slight stretching respond to chemical peels, or C02 laser resurfacing. Deep boxcar scars do better with surgical excision followed by laser resurfacing.
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| BEFORE Acne scars |
Post Acne scars following Obagi Blue Peel |
Call 559-434-9497 for an appointment or additional information
Moles and other facial lesion removal
Most elevated lesions such as moles on the face can be removed by shaving flat with the surrounding surface without leaving too much of a scar. Other lesions have to be removed as you would remove a large scar. |