create your own

Acne Scars

88
rate or flag this page

By monitor


Treat Yourself to Acne Scar Treatments

If you've read any of my other articles i think you already know what i feel the best method for getting rid of acne and acne scars is: prevention. A healthy, well researched diet, proper rest, and regular skin cleansing can do wonders toward curing your acne problems and preventing scars from ever becoming an issue. With that said, let's look at why I feel like prevention is so important. What might you have to go through if you acne is taken care of carelessly or rashly? What are some options available to you if you were unable to prevent it with diet, sleep, and washing? It can get a bit scary, but let's talk about it. Acne scars can get really ugly. You probably know that already because you've seen what havoc acne can wreak on your face while you have it and even a long time afterwards. Over the years, several methods have been developed to help lessen the degree of acne scars and, when possible, even remove them.


Clear It Up Chemically

That doesn't sound too nice does it!? In the not it's not quite as bad as it sounds, but it's still not something I'd like to go through if i can avoid it. Chemical peels are one of the most popular and more available acne scar treatments on the market, particularly because you don't have to get a licensed medical professional to administer it for you in most cases. With chemical peels, a specially formulated chemical compound is applied to the affected area (or to the whole face) to make the skin blister and then peel off, hence the name.

As grotesque or scary as the method might sound, it's actually quite effective. The ‘new' skin that replaces the skin that was peeled off is much younger looking and less scarred. The whole treatment takes a few sessions - about four to six - but the end result is usually excellent and very visible.

The side effects of chemical peels aren't very serious and will usually clear up in a few days after the treatment. Such effects are also, in most cases, limited to just skin dryness, a little redness or some mild skin irritation. Still, a beet red face is not nice to deal with. Remember, with proper prevention this can be avoided altogether.


Fill ‘Er Up!

One of the most common types of acne scars is the kind that leaves big holes on your face, so much so that they can't be covered up with simple makeup or cosmetics. Get a load of what some doctors are recommending. Dermal fillers, another acne scar treatment technique, were designed to solve just that type of problem. I don't recommend this at all. Now as I've said before I'm not an official expert. Please don't take my recommendations for or against anything as official. In fact, just to be safe, I'll come right out and say you should not listen to me. I'm just a person who dealt with acne, and was able to clear it up without scarring by following some simple principles. I think those principles can work for you too.

Dermal fillers usually make use of fat or collagen, sometimes from other animals like cows (!). The filler substance is injected into the scarred area to raise the surface of the skin and thus smoothen it out. When used on the right kinds of acne scars, dermal fillers can yield some very noticeable and very immediate results. This just sounds gross to me!

One problem with dermal fillers is that they're not permanent; you'll have to get another treatment session every six or so months in order to keep up the benefit from the initial treatment. You can relive the magic again and again! This maintenance can get pretty expensive, but using dermal fillers is still an option if you intend to just lose the scar temporarily.

Always consult a dermatologist or a professional before you sign on for any sort of treatment. They can identify the type of acne scars you have and then recommend the best option to get rid of them. It's also very possible that some treatments will have adverse effects on you, to the point that the effects will seriously threaten your health. And even a perfect face isn't worth that.


Laser skin resurfacing


Some Color Adjustment

 

As if the craterous marks that acne left behind in your face weren't enough, the lesions also commonly leave behind hyperpigmentation or post inflammatory hyperpigmentation. What on earth is hyperpigmentation, you may be asking yourself. Well, those are the incredibly annoying, and often embarrassing, color discrepancies that acne leaves behind. Depending on your skin color, these unflattering marks can turn up in any shape and hue. They can be brown, red, tan or black. In most cases, hyperpigmentation will resolve itself, just as soon as your skin finishes healing itself. However, depending on the rate in which your skin regenerates, this could take up to several months! If those marks are hideously noticeable or cause you to feel self conscious, then maybe you need to speed up the healing process in order to get rid of them.

One of the cheapest ways of speeding up the process of removing the mismatched condition of your skin is to exfoliate. Exfoliating removes dead skin cells and unclogs pores so that new skin cells will have a chance to break through. So the quicker you get rid of that strangely colored skin, the quicker a fresh, normally-hued patch will be able to grow in. But exfoliating can only do so much and you may not have the patience to wait around for results. You can also try melanin-production inhibiting medications like hydroquinone, or maybe chemical exfoliants like Tretinoin. Vitamin C aids in lightening the skin, and Copper Peptides enable your body to heal wounds much faster to get back your normally radiant skin.


Treatments requiring professional assistance

When all else fails, pigmentation problems can be cleared up with Intense Pulse Light

Treatment. This involves exposing the affected area of skin to a very bright light, which normalizes the skin color in that area and improves the skin's elastin.

To treat pock-like scarring and other unsightly shapes left in your face, as mentioned earlier, you can consider dermal fillers, or you might want to think about laser resurfacing. Laser resurfacing involves removing the top layers of skin in order to smooth the surface and get rid of dents and raised portions of scar tissue left on your face (or other parts of your body). Although laser surgery of any kind can be quite costly, it does tend to yield the best, consistent results.

If your acne scarring is severe, you may want to talk to a medical professional about the option of punch graft treatment. This is only suitable for very deep scarring that doesn't include hyperpigmentation. By deep scarring, I mean those ice pick type acne scars that stubbornly refused to cooperate with any other treatment that you desperately tried. Punch graft treatment involves the removal of the acne scar by excision, and then the wound is closed with sutures. This doesn't paint a very pretty picture, which is why only people suffering from extreme scarring would take it into consideration.

Regardless of the type or severity of your acne scarring, don't lose hope because the number of treatments available are vast and promising. If you can't heal up those wounds with over-the-counter drugs or products, you'd definitely be doing your skin a favor by making an appointment with a dermatologist or laser surgeon in order to discuss further options.

Comments

RSS for comments on this Hub

MrMarmalade profile image

MrMarmalade  says:
2 years ago

This is one I have never had.

My sympathy always goes out to the one who suffer 20 years down the road.

papasmurf profile image

papasmurf  says:
2 years ago

Good article highlighting the various options available for clearing up these nuisances but I espcecially enjoy reading your posts because they often highlight the natural ways to fight this. Diet, rest and regular cleansing.

Eileen Hughes profile image

Eileen Hughes  says:
2 years ago

A truly great helpful hub. Yes it is not nice although I have never had a real bad problem with acne as a teenager I had none. I believe it was in my late 30's that I ended up with quite a lot and I really put this down to my abssession with lollies. Yes I have been a lollie aholic.

I have often used vitaman e on my face for scaring and think that it helps. But it depends on the level of scaring too.

blankblah88  says:
13 months ago

Ive been using glycolic acid, bio oil, and acnefree popmark fillers along with tee tree oil on indentions. Ive seen some improvement just recently but ive been applying this stuff for months. I use lemons and bio oil on my stretch marks

jamesblack2020  says:
11 months ago

Great hub! Very, very impressed.......thanks for sharing.

solve rubix cube  says:
5 months ago

good article, few things that i didnt knew !

StevenCavendish profile image

StevenCavendish  says:
3 months ago

Awesome hub. Keep up the great work.

ลงประกาศฟรี  says:
6 weeks ago

It interesting

Review Source profile image

Review Source  says:
6 weeks ago

Great hub, very informative.

Submit a Comment
Members and Guests

Sign in or sign up and post using a hubpages account.


optional


  • No HTML is allowed in comments, but URLs will be hyperlinked
  • Comments are not for promoting your hubs or other sites

Advice on Acne

  • How can a 35-year old male treat facial cysts?

    How can a 35-year old male treat facial cysts? I am a 35 year old male who experienced moderate, and sometimes severe, acne from ages 18-27. It led to real depression. That whole period was a blur of seeing doctors, staying inside, obsessing and feeling low nearly to the point of suicide. I was previously considered handsome and felt like after college I'd turned into an antisocial leper. Back in those days I would wake up to 2-3 new whiteheads every day that would (sorry) explode and bleed. My diet was fine and health otherwise normal. But my face looked terrible. I tried and tried to find diet and other lifestyle patterns that would exacerbate it, but there were no patterns. I slowly became shy and continue to be so. During that time, I tried the following, as recommended, to no avail - -minocycline -doxycycline -benzaclin -accutane (twice) -retin-A -proactiv -murad -differin None of it had an noticeable effect. Then like a miracle in 2003, a new doctor recommended Bactrim which cured my skin completely from 2003-2008. None of my various doctors could explain why it worked, but I didn't care. For those 5 years, I was so carefree. I went out. I talked to people. I thought acne was behind me. But in 2009, my skin began reverting to its old ways. One awful weekend last spring, I had 8 huge cysts, 4 on both sides of my face. I looked like something was seriously wrong with me. Turning over on the pillow would wake me up at night because of the pain. I went on Bactrim again right away, but I'd obviously become immune to it. To make matters worse, I have observed absolutely zero males my age with a problem this bad. In the last few months it's only gotten worse. I've found myself becoming reclusive all over again, avoiding people at my job. I actually have a good job these days, a new job that requires some confidence and sociability and face to face interaction with clients. I feel like such a freak. I know many of you will say - we can't help, see a doctor. I have seen 6 doctors in 10 years and none of them have been willing to look at any root problems. They shrug and say, "Have you tried benzoyl peroxide?" etc. No one has asked about hormones or any other deep-down issue that could possibly make a 35 year old male have persistent cystic acne. I have seen a few women my age with mild acne, but no males with multiple, noticeable cysts. (I did get some relief back in the bad old days once when a doctor used cortisone shot one me. Is that something that would be seriously risky if I tried it myself? I've always assumed it was benign enough, but they obviously don't sell cortisone shots in the pharmacy or anything.) As you can probably tell, I'm desperate. I'm frustrated, I'm embarrassed and I feel like I'm at my wit's end. I wasted my 20s hiding out from life because of acne and I don't want to go back there. I would drop money on a miracle surgery if I thought it would make this problem go away. After so many doctors and so many drugs - what else, on a deeper level, could be wrong with me? - 2 weeks ago

  • Looking past the pizza face

    I skipped out on most of the woes of growing up; I've never had issues with my figure (naturally wicked metabolism), never cared too much about social circle pressures, no issues with clothes and dressing up. But...I've always had issues with my skin. Acne was my nightmare growing up. Looking back, my acne from high school really wasn't so bad but it was terrible in the OMG teenager way. Then when I hit college it really did turn bad, peaked at its worst about 2, 2.5 years ago (complete with scarring), and has been slowly petering down (but not gone!) since. I've had many comments about it, most/all unsolicited, and much as I love my family they're often the most graceless about it (Dad has literally said "How will you get a boyfriend like that?" and Mom has said "you look like you have chicken pox"). Explicit (bordering on impolite) requests/demands for them to kindly STFU about my skin hadn't done anything until my skin really did start improving, so...my skin was a very, very, very sore subject with me. It still is (I think it's understandable when strangers on the bus accost me about it). I lived with my parents, was on their insurance, and since they sincerely thought I could fix my face if only I had more homemade facials/ate more vegetables/consumed this random Chinese medicine (okay, I'm somewhat cynical about Chinese meds)/what have you, I never actually tried the more conventional Western approaches (antibiotics, birth control, Accutane). My face has improved from growing up, and now I'm actually taking medication for it (since I need birth control now anyway). It's not gone, but it's getting better. And my boyfriend, whom I think is absolutely gorgeous, seems to have absolutely no issue with my face even in the midst of a breakout, so I'm actually hearing direct positive things about my looks for once! But my face is still the One Body Image Issue I have, and frequently I am envious of strangers I see (male and female) who have complexions like porcelain, and even those without makeup have at least even toned and smooth skin and look simple and clean and nice. I know everyone has their own issues, but while I can say 'people love all different sizes and shapes, not everyone has to be supermodel thin' I can't really convince myself that people have a preference for a face like a pizza. (Although I am aware that my face is nowhere near that bad anymore.) I am not a fan of makeup, though I am possibly in the minority there (I don't care enough about fashion to actually research how many women in my age and beyond wear makeup on a regular basis), so the impression that everyone else has perfect skin is probably a little flawed. As a broke college student, I really can't afford laser resurfacing or what have you. This isn't a question on how to treat my acne anyway (the Pill is helping, I just need to give it more time. And frankly, after scarring and years of acne, I'm not exactly expecting miracles, so hopefully I don't have unrealistic expectations). Just...how do I stop letting my face affect my self esteem so much? Especially on days when I look in the mirror and can't seem to see past OMG SPOTS? - 2 weeks ago

  • Why does stress cause this to happen?

    Can stress cause ingrown facial hair? Gross details (you were warned!) inside. I was laid off from my job in November, and Christmas also came along shortly after that, so I have been experiencing some stress. For the past two weeks I have also been experiencing some pretty annoying acne, and it's caused by ingrown hairs. The only relief I can get is by waiting for the tip of the hair to emerge from the skin, and pulling the whole damn thing out tweezers - shaving only prolongs the problem. I noticed this happening the last time I was laid off from a job (about six years ago). Why does stress cause ingrown facial hair to occur more easily? As well, I should say that I ate all the bad foods over Christmas, I am overweight (which I think is a factor because of increased hormone production), I have low-grade folliculitis on my scalp and arms. - 5 weeks ago

working