


A burn is an injury that occurs when the skin gets too much exposure and/or comes into direct contact with sources like heat, electricity, chemicals, light, radiation and friction. Normally, burns only affect the skin, with only the worst types of burns affecting deeper tissues like muscles, bones and blood vessels.
It is very important to manage burns as they cause grave pain, and can even result to permanent disfigurement and scarring. With our reconstructive offerings, we can help you manage and conceal your burn injuries.
Definition
Scar revision is unique in the field of facial plastic and reconstructive surgery because the initial traumatic event and its immediate treatment is not within the control of the plastic surgeon . Candidates for scar revision procedures often present after significant loss of regional tissue, injury that crosses anatomically distinct facial aesthetic units , inadequate wound closure and poor post -injury wound management.
Etiology
Unfavorable facial scars result from a variety of influences, over which the reconstructive surgeon often has little initial control. Patients who present with unaesthetic facial scars typically have wounds that (1) exhibit an unfavorable configuration with respect to length and direction of RSTLs ( relaxed skin tension lines), (2) have undergone pathologic healing processes, (3) unfavorably cross anatomic regions, (4) are subjected to constant deforming contractile forces because of underlying anatomy, and (5) are deeply traumatic.
Purpose
Psychological and physical considerations
Preparation
Timing of scar revision
Timing of scar revision depends on type and location of injury and the psychological readiness of the patient. A 6- to 12-month waiting period following initial injury is usually advised . Before the surgical intervention , a thorough assessment includes characteristics of the initial injury, relationships to anatomic location and relaxed skin tension lines (RSTLs), likelihood of pathologic healing (such as hypertrophic scar , keloid ) , and any regional functional impairment by deformity ( such as oral or ocular impairment ) . Surgeons should also recognize that conservative nonsurgical methods may be applicable as a primary treatment method.
Description
The following will present the most common surgical techniques in scar revision :
Z-plasty
As a transposition flap, Z-plasty allows for 2 adjacent undermined triangular flaps, constructed from the same central axis, to transpose over each other and to lie in the other's originating bed.
Scar revision. Classic Z-plasty composed of two 60° angles.
W-plasty
W-plasty (also termed the running W-plasty or zig-zag plasty) is in rendering a lengthy linear scar irregular.
Scar revision. Size and number differential between W-plasty triangles to ensure corresponding fit between inner and outer wound curvature.
Geometric broken line closure
A variant of the W-plasty, geometric broken line closure (GBLC) employs the same illusory principles as a W-plasty, seeking to maximally create irregularity in a linear scar and thus render it less visible than a procedure with a regular patterned unbroken configuration.
Scar revision. Excision following design of geometric broken line.
M-plasty
A useful technique to preserve healthy tissue and lessen the chance of secondary tissue deformity is the M-plasty. The M-plasty, by creating 2 separate 30° angles instead of one, decreases the loss of surrounding healthy tissue by nearly 50%.
Scar revision. Central scar with bilateral M-plasty.
Adjunctive Techniques
Dermabrasion
Laser resurfacing Techniques
Ablative vs Non-ablative Lasers
Intralesional Steroids
Contraindications
Contraindications to scar revision include :
Cleft lip and cleft palate are congenital deformities caused by abnormal facial development. This condition occurs in 1 out of 1500 babies here in the Philippines, making it one of the most common birth defects in our country.
Fortunately, clefting is highly treatable; with professional help, reconstructive procedure can be done within 45 minutes, leaving patients to achieve a normal lip and nose after recovery. Our plastic surgeons are highly proficient in this reconstructive technique, which can permanently remove the burden that comes from having this unfortunate deformity.
Traumatic injuries are physical wounds or shocks that come from external sources, as opposed to illnesses or diseases that grow from and thrive within the body. When injuries are serious, they normally leave lasting scars that are impossible to remove permanently.
However, various techniques can be applied to make them less noticeable. Our team has the expertise to make traumatic injuries/scars look like they aren't even there!