Scar Healing - How to Heal Scars
The skin is designed to repair wounds quickly to prevent blood loss and infection. When the body is injured, a ‘collagen glue” is formed that the body deposits into the injured area for immediate defense and strength. In normal healing of the skin, the collagen glue is slowly replaced by healthy cells and blended into surrounding skin.
The healing process that results in the formation of scars is necessary in the reconnection of broken skin, therefore, any significant harm to the dermal layer will result in at least some degree of scarring. A new scar might be dark and raised but most will eventually level out and pale, becoming less noticeable with time.
Total scar healing can actually endure for up to ten years. In children, with faster skin turnover rates, scars heal faster and to a greater extent. Moving into adulthood, this rate slows and scars remain visible for longer.
Keloid scars are dense, tumor-like buildups of tissue that can itch and tend to grow in size without shrinking. They appear when the body keeps producing tough, fibrous collagen after a wound has healed.
Keloids can form from all types of injuries, ranging from simple scratches to insect bites to medical procedures. Keloid scars can appear on any part of the body but most commonly occur over the breastbone, on earlobes and on shoulders.
Unlike keloid scars, hypertrophic scars stick to the area of injury and don’t grow beyond this ‘boundary’; they will usually do just the opposite and flatten out with patience. Both hypertrophic and keloid scars are raised scars, secreting more collagen than other scars, however, in hypertrophic scars you will see a lessening of collagen output after approximately six months.
Atrophic scars are characterized by a thinning and diminished elasticity of the skin because the loss of normal skin architecture. A type of atrophic scar, striae distensae (stretch marks), falls in this category because the body cannot produce enough skin in time to accommodate the rapid stretching of skin.
Healing Scars Faster
The general idea of one method to accelerate the body’s repair process and heal hypertrophic scars is to re-damage the area in a controlled manner (with needles, lasers, acid, etc.) to stimulate the regeneration of healthy skin.
Another idea in the scar treatment market is to utilize enzymes and skin renewal fibroblast activators to promote the body’s own reconstruction processes, thereby healing scar tissue and obtaining improved results. Fibroblasts are the cells in the basal membrane of the skin that are the precursors of all the structural elements of healthy skin, including those that give moisture, tensile strength and elasticity to skin. These healing scar creams often contain enzymes that dissolve or “digest” damaged and dying cells.
A Natural Serum to Heal Scars Quickly
Instead of scar revision, heal scars naturally with a serum made by the garden snail that has very similar properties as our own skin. It manages the production of good fibroblasts and controls collagen secretion. By augmenting fibroblast count and decreasing collagen output, you can effectively prevent and diminish keloid and hypertrophic scarring.
BIOSKINCARE heals scars naturally with its miracle serum collected straight from a living creature. It regulates fibroblast and collagen production, promoting a balanced regeneration and healing of scar tissue. Heal scars and remove unwanted scar tissue with the help of protein enzymes.
- Clarita Milles
