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Scar Management After Cosmetic Surgery
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The final appearance of a cosmetic surgery scar is influenced as much by what happens after the operation as by what happens during it. Diligent post-operative scar management can substantially improve the eventual result — and conversely, neglecting it can leave a patient with a more visible scar than the surgery itself would have produced. This guide covers what evidence-based scar management actually involves, what is commonly recommended but isn’t supported by good evidence, and how the principles apply across the most commonly performed at our Baker Street clinic.
For the underlying biology and the different scar types, start with . For the broader treatment overview, see at Centre for Surgery’s CQC-regulated Baker Street private hospital.
How a cosmetic surgery scar matures
A new surgical incision moves through three predictable phases of healing. Understanding the timeline matters because it determines when each intervention is most useful.
The scar typically looks worst between weeks 6 and 12, when Redness & Sensitivity (https://www.researchpeptides.co.uk) peaks. This is normal and not a sign that something has gone wrong. From month 3 onwards, gradual fading begins. By month 12, most scars have reached their final mature appearance — typically a fine pale line that is much harder to see than the active scar was at 6 weeks.
Active scar management starts as soon as the wound has fully closed — usually around 2 weeks after the operation — and continues for the first 6 to 12 months.
The interventions with the strongest evidence
The single intervention with the strongest randomised-trial evidence base for scar . gel or sheeting applied to a fully closed wound:
Practical use: start once the wound is fully closed (usually around 2 weeks post-op). Apply gel twice daily, or wear sheeting for 12+ hours a day. Continue for at least 3 months — ideally 6 — to maximise benefit. For full discussion see
A fresh scar contains immature melanocytes that to UV exposure. A few unprotected sun exposures during the first 6 to 12 months can leave the scar permanently darker than the surrounding skin — particularly in skin types III to VI. Once the pigment has set, it can be very difficult to correct.
SPF 50 sunscreen applied daily to the scar, regardless of weather. Continued for at least 12 months. Physical sun protection (clothing, shade) where the scar is in a directly exposed area. For full discussion see .
Once the wound has fully closed — typically around 4 weeks post-operation — gentle scar massage with an moisturiser can be . The technique involves firm circular movements over the scar for 5–10 minutes twice daily. Benefits include:
For full technique see .
For procedures involving substantial soft tissue work — tummy tucks, body lifts, breast surgery — compression garments are worn for 6 weeks or longer to reduce swelling and support healing. This isn’t a scar-specific intervention but it does help by reducing wound tension and limiting fluid collection that can disrupt the early healing phase. For full discussion see .
For scars that are developing features — raised, firm, red, persistent — triamcinolone steroid injection given every 4–6 weeks collagen overproduction and flattens the scar. Started at 6–8 weeks post-operation if a scar is features, the intervention often prevents a hypertrophic scar from establishing. Indicated for high-risk patients (darker skin types, history of poor scarring, high-tension anatomical areas). For full discussion see
Wound care during the first two weeks
Before scar management proper begins, the wound itself needs to heal. The basics:
Once the wound has closed and the sutures have been removed (or absorbed), active scar management begins.
Procedure-specific considerations
cosmetic procedures produce different scar patterns, and the approach to scar management is tailored accordingly.
The horizontal scar across the lower abdomen is long but designed to sit below the or bikini line. The scar is under moderate tension and benefits from extended silicone treatment, compression garment support during the first 6 weeks, and ongoing sun protection. Adjunctive Morpheus8 or laser resurfacing in the months after surgery can further refine the scar.
Different incision patterns leave different scars. Inframammary incisions (hidden in the breast crease) and periareolar incisions (around the areola) heal beautifully in most patients. Vertical and anchor incisions used for lift and reduction are longer and benefit from extended silicone use and sun protection. For full discussion see .
Facial incisions heal exceptionally well thanks to the rich blood supply of the face. Scars hidden in hairlines, behind the ears, or in natural skin creases typically become very inconspicuous. Diligent sun protection is important for facial scars.
The long incisions used for body contouring after weight loss heal in higher-tension anatomical areas and can be more visible than facial scars. Extended silicone treatment, sun protection, scar massage and selective laser treatment all materially improve the result. For full see .
Caesarean scars are not cosmetic surgery scars but the principles are the same. The horizontal lower scar is under moderate tension and from the same evidence-based interventions. For dedicated guidance see .
Small linear scars in the face or body. Standard silicone, sun protection and massage approach. For full discussion see .
Adjunctive in-clinic treatments
For patients who want to optimise the result beyond standard home scar management, several in-clinic options are available:
Most patients don’t need any of these — standard home scar management produces a fine result. Adjunctive treatment is held for cases where the standard approach isn’t enough.
Lifestyle factors that influence the scar
What to expect during the first year
A useful frame for setting expectations:
Photographs at consistent angles every 4 to 6 weeks help track progress . changes are hard to notice; comparison shots show the improvement clearly.
What we don’t recommend
Frequently asked questions
Silicone gel or sheeting: once the wound is fully closed, typically around 2 weeks . Scar massage: usually 4 weeks. Sun protection: as soon as the wound is healed. steroid (if needed): 6–8 weeks. Laser or Morpheus8 (if needed): 3+ months.
Silicone for at least 3 months, ideally 6. Sun protection for at least 12 months. Scar massage as long as the scar feels firm or tethered.
Scar maturation continues for 12 to 18 months. The scar is usually at peak redness at 6 weeks, starts fading visibly by month 3, and reaches its final appearance around month 12.
No scar disappears entirely. With evidence-based management, most cosmetic surgery scars become a fine pale line that is difficult to see without close inspection.
Speak to your surgeon at the next follow-up — or sooner if you are concerned. Early intervention with intralesional steroid and intensified silicone use often prevents a hypertrophic scar from .
No. Sunbeds deliver high-intensity UV that can permanently darken a fresh scar. Avoid for at least 12 months after surgery.
Once the wound is fully closed (usually 2 weeks), swimming in chlorinated pools is generally fine. Sea water is also acceptable. Avoid until the wound is fully closed.
Yes — massaging an open wound disrupts healing. Wait until the wound is fully closed, typically around 4 weeks. If in doubt, your surgeon will confirm at follow-up.
Yes — scar management is part of every procedure pathway. Specific guidance is given at consultation and reinforced at follow-up appointments. Adjunctive in-clinic treatments (laser, Morpheus8, steroid injection) are available when needed.
Centre for is a CQC-regulated plastic surgery clinic at 95–97 Baker Street, Marylebone. Scar management is integrated into every procedure pathway, with structured follow-up and access to the full range of adjunctive treatments when needed — silicone, intralesional steroid, laser resurfacing, Morpheus8 radiofrequency microneedling, and . All performed by GMC-registered consultant plastic . No GP referral required.
For related guides, see , , , , , and .
Centre for Surgery · CQC-regulated · GMC specialist-registered surgeons · · · ·
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Centre for Surgery is a CQC-regulated private hospital on London’s Baker Street, delivering plastic and cosmetic surgery through specialist surgeons. Our expertise spans facial procedures including and , , for men, and body contouring procedures such as and . Patient safety, surgical excellence and natural-looking results sit at the heart of everything we do.
Centre for Surgery is a CQC-regulated private hospital on London’s iconic , offering plastic and cosmetic surgery led by GMC-registered consultant surgeons.
Marylebone
London
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