From Dressing to Scar Maturation: A Practical Guide to Post-Procedure Care in Dermatologic Surgery

Auteurs-es

  • Jorge R. Georgakopoulos

Résumé

At‑A‑Glance Principles

• Prioritize a clean, moist, protected wound environment (e.g., petrolatum with a non‑adherent dressing) to reduce crusting and support re‑epithelialization.

• Avoid routine use of topical antibiotics on clean dermatologic wounds; randomized studies show similar infection rates versus petrolatum, with a higher risk of allergic contact dermatitis in antibiotic-treated groups.

• Minimize wound tension early (first 6–12 weeks) through activity modification, appropriate timing of suture removal, and consideration of prolonged taping/Steri‑strips at high‑tension sites to reduce scar widening and hypertrophy.

• Start silicone therapy (gel or sheets) once epidermal integrity is restored, which often occurs 2 weeks after suture removal, and consider early use in patients at higher risk for hypertrophic or keloid scarring.

• Treat the ‘inflammatory’ scar early, as persistent erythema/telangiectasia and early hypertrophy often respond better to early intervention (e.g., vascular laser, intralesional corticosteroid) than that for late‑stage scars.

Biographie de l'auteur-e

Jorge R. Georgakopoulos

Dr. Jorge Georgakopoulos is a board-certified dermatologist and fellowship-trained Mohs Micrographic Surgeon with clinical expertise in cutaneous oncology and facial reconstruction. He is a Clinical Associate at University of Toronto within the Division of Dermatology conducting Mohs surgery at Carlton Skin Clinic and cutaneous oncology clinics at Toronto General Hospital and Princess Margaret Cancer Centre. Dr. Georgakopoulos completed his undergraduate and Doctor of Medicine degrees at Western University. He then completed his dermatology residency and Mohs surgery fellowship at University of Toronto. Dr. Georgakopoulos has received global recognition for his research work having published over 80 peer-reviewed articles in leading journals, earned several national distinctions, including the Best Young Researcher Award and been involved in the approval of therapies through Canada's Drug Agency.

Références

AJ, Krivda SJ, et al. Infection and allergy incidence in ambulatory surgery patients using white petrolatum vs bacitracin ointment: a randomized controlled trial. JAMA. 1996;276(12):972-977.

Atkinson JAM, McKenna KT, Barnett AG, McGrath DJ, Rudd M. A randomized, controlled trial to determine the efficacy of paper tape in preventing hypertrophic scar formation in surgical incisions that traverse Langer’s skin tension lines. Plast Reconstr Surg. 2005;116(6):1648-1656. doi:10.1097/01.prs.0000187147.73963.a5

O’Reilly S, Crofton E, Brown M, Strong J, Ziviani J. Use of tape for the management of hypertrophic scar development: a systematic review. Scars Burn Heal. 2021;7:20595131211029206. Published 2021 Jul 12. doi:10.1177/20595131211029206.

O’Brien L, Jones DJ. Silicone gel sheeting for preventing and treating hypertrophic and keloid scars. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2013;2013(9):CD003826. doi:10.1002/14651858.CD003826.pub3

Tran B, Wu JJ, Ratner D, Han G. Topical scar treatment products for wounds: a systematic review. Dermatol Surg. 2020;46(12):1564-1571. doi:10.1097/DSS.0000000000002712

Vazquez-Martinez O, Eichelmann K, Garcia-Melendez M, Miranda I, Avila-Lozano A, Vega D, et al. Pulsed dye laser for early treatment of scars after dermatological surgery. J Drugs Dermatol. 2015;14(11):1209-1212.

Maghfour J, Meisenheimer J, Kantor J. Cosmetic and functional outcomes of excisional surgical wounds healed by secondary intention: a systematic review. JAAD Int. 2025;22:100-110. doi:10.1016/j.jdin.2025.05.016

Field T, Peck M, Scd, Hernandez-Rief M, Krugman S, Burman I, et al. Postburn itching, pain, and psychological symptoms are reduced with massage therapy. J Burn Care Rehabil. 2000;21(3):189-193. doi:10.1067/mbc.2000.105087

Cho YS, Jeon JH, Hong A, Yang HT, Yim H, Cho YS, et al. The effect of burn rehabilitation massage therapy on hypertrophic scar after burn: a randomized controlled trial. Burns. 2014;40(8):1513-1520. doi:10.1016/j.burns.2014.02.005

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Publié

2026-03-20

Comment citer

1.
From Dressing to Scar Maturation: A Practical Guide to Post-Procedure Care in Dermatologic Surgery. Can Dermatol Today [Internet]. 20 mars 2026 [cité 20 mars 2026];7(1):27–32. Disponible à: https://canadiandermatologytoday.com/article/view/7-1-Georgakopoulos

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Comment citer

1.
From Dressing to Scar Maturation: A Practical Guide to Post-Procedure Care in Dermatologic Surgery. Can Dermatol Today [Internet]. 20 mars 2026 [cité 20 mars 2026];7(1):27–32. Disponible à: https://canadiandermatologytoday.com/article/view/7-1-Georgakopoulos

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