These are some of the diseases cured by Dr. Chakraborti - Skin Ulcers, Mouth Ulcers, Genital Ulcer, Herpes Infection, Siphilis, Gonorrhoea, AIDS, Beauty Spots, Leprosy
Dr.Tamal Chakraborty doctor
   Dermatology
... Trichotillomania
... Alopecia Areata
... Androgenic alopecia in women
... Androgenic alopecia (male)
... Kaposi sarcoma
... Basal cell carcinoma
... Angiokeratoma
... Malignant melanoma lentigo maligna
... Paget disease of the brest
... Keloids and hypertrophic scars
... Melasma
... Lentigo, juvenilr lentigo, solar lentigo
... Polymorphous light eruption
... Sun-damaged skin, photoaging
... Scleroderma
... Acute cutaneous lupus erythematosus
... Bullous pemphigoid
... Pemphigus vulgaris
... Dermatitis herpetiformis
... Head lice
... Scabies
... Schamgerg disease
... Stevens-Johnson syndrome
... Cutaneous drug eruptions
... Non-specific viral rash
... Hemangiomas of infancy
 
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Keloids and hypertrophic scars ...

 
Keloids and hypertrophic scars
Hypertrophic scars and keloids form in predisposed peoples in areas of
preceding trauma such as burns, surgery, acne or piercings.
 

DESCRIPTION
Hypertrophic scars are exuberant scars or healing responses to trauma or injury. Keloids extend beyond area of trauma or injury. Most common sites include chest, head, neck. Earlobe is another common site. Surgery, burns, piercing, acne are common insults.

PHYSICAL FINDINGS

  • Early, normal scars are usually red to purple and firm during initial weeks of healing.
  • Itching, tenderness are common for normal scars, hypertrophic scars, keloids.

Hypertrophic scars
Have a similar color and texture to those of normal scars but are present for a longer period of time, lasting months. Larger and more elevated than normal scars. Surface is smooth, dome-shaped, shiny with prominent vessels. One portion of a scar may appear normal, another portion hypertrophied. Unlike keloid scars, they remain confined to site of injury. May regress over time without treatment.

Keloids
By definition, keloid scars extend beyond the area of trauma or injury. Firm, red to violaceous, large, tender nodules. Usually hyperpigmented in African-Americans, red to purple in white people. Depending on type of original injury, lesion may be linear or nodular. In rare instances, keloids may arise spontaneously. This usually occurs on chest and shoulders. Keloid scars show no tendency toward regression and tend to enlarge over time.

TREATMENT

  • Patients with history of these scars should be discouraged from cosmetic procedures and piercings. Those requiring surgical procedures in areas at increased risk of abnormal scarring should be advised of this possibility, reminded at time of suture removal.
  • Hypertrophic scars and keloids occur by a genetically determined process. Parents of a child who has a cutaneous procedure that results in such scarring need reassurance and a management plan.
  • Early abnormal scarring typically responds better than older, less active scars. Early intervention advised in these cases.
  • Intralesional corticosteroid injection probably treatment of choice initially for most.
  • Radiation therapy and more recently pulse-dye laser therapy have been used for hypertrophic scars, keloids.
  • Compression therapy and silastic sheeting helpful but inconvenient.
  • Newer topical silicon-containing gels have been marketed for the treatment of hypertrophic scars, although efficacy in all patients questionable.
  • Surgical removal or correction of hypertrophic scars and keloids requires experience, careful monitoring. Keloid scars tend to recur often, sometimes larger, after surgical removal.
  • Combination therapy with intralesional steroids and surgical  excision  is sometimes  required.
  • Consider referral to a dermatologist or plastic surgeon with an interest in scar removal.
  • Hyper­trophic scars and keloids difficult to eradicate, no matter what procedure is used.
 
Courtesy by : Thomas P. Habif, James L. Campbell Jr, M. Shane Chapman, James G. H. Dinulos, Kathryn A. Zug
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