If you have a scar that I had surgically removed, then you will find that the post-operative incision is not flat, but raised, why is that? Can this bulge still grow flat? How long will it take to grow flat?
If you have paid attention to scar treatment, you will understand that the size of the incision tension is the number one external factor affecting the growth of incision scars, and controlling the tension of the incision is the key to winning the “battle against scars”! For many years, plastic surgeons have been seeking ways to reduce incisional tension. Through years of clinical practice and experimental research, I have developed the “minimally invasive super tension reduction fine suture”, and this small post-operative bulge is the key to reducing tension at the incision with my super tension reduction suture. After the suture is closed, the original arching skin will be slowly flattened by the skin tension, so there is no need to worry about the post-operative augmentation.
Don’t expect the augmentation to grow flat quickly After knowing the function of the augmentation, scar patients will be concerned about the problem of the augmentation growing flat. The slower it grows, the flatter it will eventually recover, because the tension at the incision is relieved by this small augmentation, if it grows too fast, the greater the tension at the incision will be at the later stage of recovery, and it will be easier to form a raised scar again.