BIOSKINCARE
Natural Skin Care Products for Acne, Rosacea, Scars, Stretch Marks, Keloid, Age Spots, Aging Skin, Keratosis Pilaris, Dermatitis, Skin Healing and Treatment of Skin Blemishes.

Articles


Keloid and Hypertrophic Scars Removal Can be Achieved by Applying A Natural Skin Care Ingredient Collected from a Living Creature.

by Martha Fitzharris

Scarring and the Skin Repair Process

The removal or reduction of scars, lesions, and stretch marks from the skin depends on a process called "skin remodeling".

The skin is designed to heal wounds rapidly to avoid blood loss and infection. Scars are created from a quickly formed "collagen glue" that the body deposits into an injured area for protection and strength. In ideal skin repairing, damaged skin is quickly closed, and then the healed area is slowly repaired to remove the remaining collagen scars and blend the skin area into nearby skin.

Scar collagen is eliminated and replaced with a mixture of skin cells and invisible collagen fibers. This remodeling may continue in a skin area for up to ten years.

In children, the remodeling speed is high and scars are often rapidly eliminated from injured skin areas. But as we become adults, this rate slows down and small scars may remain for years.

One way to accelerate repair is to provoke a small amount of controlled skin damage with a needle, laser, acid, or other means, and then let the body repair processes rebuild the skin area.

A second procedure is to use enzymes and fibroblast proliferators to increase the body's normal healing processes and obtain even better final results. Fibroblasts are the cells in the basal membrane of the skin and they are the precursors of all the structural elements of healthy skin, including those that provide moisture, tensile strength and elasticity to skin. Enzymes dissolve or "digest" damaged and dying cells.

Wound Repair Process

Scars are always formed to reconnect skin that has been damaged. Initially, they may be red or dark and rose after the wound has healed but will become softer and flatter naturally over time, resulting in a flat, pale scar.

For reasons that are still waiting to be fully understood, some people suffer from raised scars that are red and thick and may be itchy or painful. Others develop scars that extend beyond the site of an injury, called keloid scars.

Keloid scars are actually thick, itchy, puckered clusters of scar tissue that grow beyond the edges of a wound or incision and rarely regress. They occur when the body keeps producing tough, fibrous protein (known as collagen) after a wound has been repaired.

Keloid scars can appear after any type of injury to the skin, including scratches, insect bites, tattoos, injections or surgical procedures. Keloid scars can appear on any part of the body, but most commonly occur on earlobes, over the breastbone and on shoulders.

Keloids are fibrotic tumors characterized by a collection of atypical fibroblasts with high deposition of extracellular matrix components, especially collagen, fibronectin, elastin, and proteoglycans. Histologically, keloids contain relatively acellular centers and thick, abundant collagen bundles that form nodules in the deep dermal portion of the lesion. Keloids present a clinical problem that must be addressed as these lesions can cause great pain, pruritus (itch) and physical disfigurement, may not improve its appearance over time, and can even affect mobility if located over a joint.

Hypertrophic scars sometimes are difficult to distinguish from keloid scars histologically and biochemically, but unlike keloids, hypertropic scars are confined to the injury site and use to mature and flatten out over time. Both types secrete larger quantities of collagen than normal scars, but typically the hypertrophic type shows declining collagen synthesis after about six months. Hypertrophic scars contain nearly twice as much glycosaminoglycans as normal scars, and this and enhanced synthetic and enzymatic reactions result in marked alterations in the matrix which affects the mechanical properties of the scars, including decreased extensibility that makes them feel firm.

As with hypertrophic scarring, people having one keloid scar are likely to be prone to this condition in the future and should alert their doctor or surgeon if they are likely to need injections or to have any kind of surgery.

Atrophic scars use to cause a thinning and diminished elasticity of the skin because the loss of normal skin architecture. An example of an atrophic scar is striae distensae, also called stretch marks.

Click to find more about how a natural skin care solution produced by a living creature dissolves scar s through enzyme digestion and activates scar removalremodeling and helps to control acne zits.

Published June 6th, 2007

Filed in Beauty, Health, Teen