Keloid Scars and How to Treat Them
Surgery, injuries, and cuts will more times than not leave a scar. Unfortunately every scar is not as basic a leaving a mark at the site of the skin injury. There is a scar known as a keloid that grows beyond the borders of the original skin injury.
Women and people with highly pigmented skin have the highest contraction rate for this type of scar. However keloids are not limited to just those subsets of people as anyone can get them. The sternum, upper arm, and upper back are the main regions where this type of scar is found. Ear piercings have caused there to be a significant amount of cases found on earlobes.
The exact cause of why keloid scars grow beyond the original injury is still not fully understood. What has been found as the most common factors are skin trauma, muscle tension, and an infection at the site of the injury. Family members having keloids present the possibility that the chances of forming this type of scar is highly augmented as the hereditary factor is believed to have a correlation effect. Prevention for those with skin susceptible to this type of scar is mainly confined to not having any piercings or tattoos and notifying your doctor before surgery. After they do form there exists some option you can take to promote their diminishment with the overall goal of keloid removal.
One would hope that surgically removing them would solve the problem right away. Alas the nature of this scar makes for its re-formation on top of the surgery scar around 50%. Laser treatments were hoped to have a lower recurrence rate but to no avail.
Even so combined along with some other treatment plans surgery can result with a lower possibility the reformation of the scar. Radiation therapy after surgery is a treatment that can limit the regrowth of a new keloid up to 70% studies have shown. Having said that the possible side effects associated with applying radiation can outweigh the treatment of what is a benign outgrowth of the skin. The feared outcome with this is malignancy.
Cryosurgery would be useful minus its effect of leaving permanent hyperpigmentation among those with darker skin.
There does exist a natural and safe keloid treatment that does not leave any of these unwanted side effects. Used by itself or accompanying surgery, a skin cream containing all natural ingredients along with Helix Aspersa Muller (snail serum) has historically diminished the size and appearance of keloids. Keloid scars benefit from this ingredient because its scar tissues are regenerated by the molecular properties found within snail serum. Keloid scar removal attempted with the use of a skin care cream such as BIOSKINREPAIR entails stimulating the regenerative processes of the skin and orchestrating the biosynthesis and deposition of new collagen.
Published August 19th, 2010
Filed in Beauty
