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Treating scars: how to best care for a wound

Mareike Steger
30-11-2023
Translation: Megan Cornish

It’s impossible to accurately predict or influence whether a wound will heal nicely or whether it’ll leave an unwelcome scar. But there are still some things you can control.

Scars are a part of life. There are no official figures from Switzerland on how many people have a scar. But according to an older survey for a pharmaceutical company (in German), one in four women and one in ten men in Germany has a scarred area on their skin.

Before the scar is after the injury: how wounds heal poorly

For laypeople, it can be summarised briefly as follows: as vasculogenic mediators are also involved in collagen formation during wound healing, they can cause disruptions to the wound healing process, creating scars.

«Scars can change their texture, feel hard, itch, or develop a pigment disorder, turning dark red,» says Aslanel, describing possible wound healing disorders. «In addition, the surrounding tissue may look different to the scar itself and vessels may form on the scar.»

The medical community differentiates between four types of scars:

What causes pathological scars?

Doctors can’t prophetically predict whether pathological scars will develop after an operation, for example. «Any surgical intervention can form a scar. But we simply never know how scars will heal.»

How scars heal well: what you can do

Once the wound has healed, special scar gels or creams can be used – after consulting a doctor – to make the tissue more supple. «But you still never know whether the scar will get better or not.»

The dermatologist doesn’t rate mechanical products such as scar rollers: «How can a mass-produced product be equally good for everyone? And also for anywhere on the skin? Scar care must always be specifically selected and adapted to individual needs.»

So, that means: ask your doctor which cream he or she recommends.

How do you treat stubborn scars?

If, despite everything, a pathological, stubborn scar has developed, dermatology can tackle it – when it comes to colour, texture and also pain. For hypertrophic scars, for example, silicone plasters can be applied or cortisone injected to make the scar tissue flatter.

In addition, special laser medicine devices are used at specialist dermatology clinics such as Hautwerk.

If a hypotrophic, i.e. dented (acne) scar has developed, the experts have to work deeper to build up tissue – with thermomechanical or radiofrequency devices and microneedling plus a special blood plasma treatment. If you want to know more about the medicine, dermatosurgeon Aslanel describes the various treatment methods for specialists in the report linked above.

By the way: not every stubborn scar needs to be lasered. Doctors decide whether special lasers, radio frequency, microneedling or injecting filling material are suitable for scar treatment on a case-by-case basis. In addition, technology shouldn’t be used too aggressively, as it could potentially make the scar worse instead of improving it.

Ideally, however, the result, whether used for medical, aesthetic or cosmetic reasons, is almost invisible, says Firat Aslanel: «Scars can never be completely hidden, but modern treatment methods can make many of them hardly noticeable.»

Header image: Shutterstock

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Mareike Steger
Autorin von customize mediahouse
oliver.fischer@digitecgalaxus.ch

I could've become a teacher, but I prefer learning to teaching. Now I learn something new with every article I write. Especially in the field of health and psychology.


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