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[music] Hello, I’m Dr. Neal Schultz
[pause]
and welcome to DermTV.
At DermTV, I get a lot of questions about keloid scars and the best news I
can give you if you think you have keloid scars is that most people who
think they have them really don’t, they really have hypertrophic scars,
which are much easier to treat. Let me explain. If you have an injury or
even a surgical procedure that creates a cut that’s repaired in the shape
of that line and you get a hypertrophic scar, the hypertrophic scar is the
approximately the size or the footprint of the original injury, it’s raised
but it’s generally the area of the injury. If you get a keloid in response
to that injury it’s not only raised but it has no relationship to that line
so it starts to grow but almost looks like a cauliflower type of shape, it
almost acts like an independent autonomous tumor that grows. In another
episode I discussed the treatment of raised hypertrophic scars;
unfortunately those treatments usually do not work for the treatment of
keloid scars. So just rubbing the keloid scar with firm pressure doesn’t
make it better, using over the counter silicone gels and sheets doesn’t
help; even my lasers don’t help keloid scars. The best way to treat keloid
scars is with injections of concentrated cortisone right into the scar.
They’re repeated at 2 to 3 week intervals, they cause the scar to become
softer when they get softer they absorb more of the cortisone and the
cortisone melts the extra collagen, the fibrous tissue in the scar and
reduces its size. If that doesn’t work then the only other option is having
the keloid scar surgically excised but when you surgically excise it you
create another injury and people prone to forming keloids, form them in
response to all injuries. So, we’re always concerned that removing the
keloid surgically will result in an additional keloid. To help prevent
that, during the surgical procedure, we inject concentrated cortisone into
the surgical site so the cortisone is there to help prevent a keloid from
recurring. And after the skin heals, it’s monitored carefully by both the
patient and the physician so at the earliest signs of raising up of the
skin, as if the keloid were trying to reform, it’s again injected with
cortisone to drive it back down and to control it and often that will
result in a superior cosmetic result. But keep one thing in mind, if you
think you have a keloid scar, at home treatments are not going to help you,
it’s time to see a dermatologist.