Facial Scar Revision Surgery

IN SYDNEY

Facial Scar Revision (Facial Scar Optimisation)

Careful assessment and staged treatment to soften texture, blend contour, and reduce colour contrast - always with realistic expectations.

My approach is considered, curated, and grounded in a deep understanding of facial anatomy. No treatment can erase a scar entirely; the goal is to help it blend - improving texture, contour, and colour in a way that fits your features and skin type. Planning weighs scar type (hypertrophic, keloid, atrophic, contracture), location and orientation relative to relaxed skin‑tension lines (RSTL), skin biology, and healing history. Interventions are sequenced sensibly - often combining non‑surgical care with minor procedures or surgical revision when indicated.

Facial Scar Revision Surgery

What is Facial Scar Revision?

Scar revision encompasses non‑surgical therapies, minor procedures, and targeted surgery designed to improve a scar’s appearance or function. Approaches vary according to the scar’s maturity, thickness, colour, texture, tethering, and direction. Many plans are staged over months to allow the skin to respond and to minimise downtime.

Facial Scar Revision Surgery

WHAT ARE YOUR OPTIONS?

What are the different options for Facial Scar Revision?

Foundation Care (Usually First‑Line)

Silicone therapy (gel/sheets) and taping for mechanical support in the early phase.

Sun protection (SPF/hat) to reduce pigment shift while scars mature.

Scar massage/desensitisation once fully epithelialised, as directed.

Fat Grafting and Nanofat (Adjuncts)

Microfat to lift selected depressed scars and soften transitions.

Nanofat (mechanically emulsified, cell‑rich) placed very superficially to target fine texture/quality - an adjunct rather than a volumiser; outcomes vary.

Injectable Modulators (Selected Scars)

Intralesional corticosteroids (e.g., triamcinolone) for hypertrophic/keloid activity.

5‑fluorouracil (5‑FU) ± low‑dose steroid in resistant cases.

Careful dosing and spacing to avoid atrophy or telangiectasia.

Surgical Techniques (When Direction/Contour Limit Outcome)

Elliptical excision with layered closure to re‑align with RSTL or relieve tension.

Z‑plasty, W‑plasty, or geometric broken‑line closure to break up straight lines and re‑direct tension.

Release of tethering/subcision ± microfat for contour.

Local flaps, serial excision, or grafting for contractures or complex sites.

Keloid‑prone scars: planned adjuvant regimen (e.g., silicone/pressure; consider radiation oncology referral in resistant cases).

Energy‑Based and Resurfacing Treatments

Vascular lasers (e.g., PDL/IPL) to reduce redness in early scars.

Fractional ablative lasers (CO₂/Er:YAG) for texture/contour; often staged.

Chemical peels (e.g., TCA) for texture/pigment; TCA CROSS for select ice‑pick scars.

Dermabrasion or microneedling in appropriate skin types.

COMBINE YOUR SCAR PLAN

Balanced, Staged Care

  • Non‑surgical optimisation first (silicone, sun protection, massage).

  • Surgical re‑orientation or release when alignment or tethering limits outcome.

  • Resurfacing (laser/chemical peel/dermabrasion) staged 8–12+ weeks after revision, as indicated.

  • Microfat for contour; nanofat for selected skin‑quality targets.

  • Camouflage strategies (make‑up, temporary colour correction) while scars mature.

Plans are individualised and often staged over 3–12+ months to allow maturation and measured improvements.)

WHY CONSIDER A FACIAL SCAR REVISION?

Who Is the Ideal Candidate?

  • Hypertrophic or widened scars that remain raised or red after initial maturation.

  • Atrophic or tethered scars that cast asymmetric shadows.

  • Scars crossing RSTL or distorting nearby landmarks (alar base, lip, brow).

  • Contractures limiting movement or comfort.

  • Realistic expectations and willingness to follow aftercare.

When another approach may be better:

  • Very early scars (<8–12 weeks): optimise foundation care first before procedural steps.

  • Active acne/inflammation or unstable pigment disorders - treat/optimise first.

  • History of aggressive keloid response - requires cautious protocols and counselling.

WHAT TO EXPECT

From Consultation to Recovery - Scar Revision Surgery

Undergoing any surgery is a detailed and personalised process. From your first consultation to your final review, every stage is carefully planned to support your comfort, safety, and optimal healing.

  • Your Initial Consultation

    Scar analysis: type, orientation, pliability, colour, thickness, tethering, and adjacent anatomy.

    Review of prior treatments and healing history; photography and plan mapping.

    Discussion of staged sequence, downtime, and realistic goals.

  • Preoperative Planning

    Sun protection, silicone therapy, and topical care where appropriate.

    Medication review (e.g., anticoagulants); smoking cessation support.

    Timing around life events; camouflage options for visible phases.

  • Procedure Day

    Setting: Clinic procedure room for minor revisions/injections; accredited day surgery or private hospital for larger revisions.

    Anaesthesia: Local anaesthetic for most; sedation/general for complex cases.

    Duration: From 15–30 minutes (injections) to 60–120 minutes (surgical revision), depending on scope.

    Technique: Tailored to the plan - precise markings, layered closure with deep tension control, and meticulous skin handling.

  • Early Recovery (First 2 Weeks)

    Expected swelling/bruising; suture removal typically day 5–7 (if used).

    Wound care instructions; avoid sun and tension on the site.

    Begin silicone therapy once closed; gentle massage after review.

  • Ongoing Maturation (6 Weeks to 12+ Months)

    Colour and thickness gradually settle; incremental improvement with staged treatments.

    Consider vascular/fractional laser or peels after full epithelialisation and as indicated.

    Follow‑up to assess progress; adjustments are made based on response.

YOUR RECOVERY

Postoperative Care & Follow-up

  • Keep the area clean/dry; follow dressing and taping instructions.

  • Silicone therapy and strict sun protection to limit pigment shift.

  • Massage/desensitisation as advised; avoid traction on the scar.

  • Return to work: usually within days for injections/minor work; 7–10+ days for larger revisions.

  • Scheduled reviews to guide the next stage of care..

SURGICAL RISKS

What Are the Risks of Scar Revision Surgery?

  • Bruising, swelling, temporary numbness or sensitivity.

  • Infection (uncommon), delayed healing, wound edge separation.

  • Pigment shift (hyper/hypopigmentation), particularly with sun exposure or energy devices.

  • Recurrence or worsening in keloid‑prone patients despite careful protocols.

  • Contour irregularity, asymmetry, or need for staged refinement.

  • Rare allergic or medication reactions with injectables.

Why Choose Dr Karagiannis for your Scar Revision Surgery?

1. Expertise & Experience

Multiple facial aesthetic fellowships across Europe and Australia with focused training in scar‑conscious incision planning, layered closure, and tension management.

2. Combined Apporach

Facility with re‑orientation techniques (Z/W‑plasty, geometric broken‑line), fat grafting/nanofat adjuncts, and fractional/vascular lasers when indicated.

3. Patient-Centered Care

Measured, guideline-compliant counselling - expectations set clearly; staged plans to minimise downtime and optimise settling.

4. Continuity of Care

Continuity of care in accredited facilities with structured follow‑up.

Scar Revision Surgery FAQS

  • No. Scars are permanent. The aim is to improve how they blend by refining texture, contour, and colour.

  • Early changes may be visible within weeks, but maturation and staged treatments usually span several months.

  • Keloids have a recurrence risk even with careful protocols. We reduce risk with staged care and adjuvants, but complete control cannot be guaranteed.

  • Minor treatments are performed in the clinic procedure room. Larger revisions are undertaken in accredited day surgery or a private hospital.

  • Functional or reconstructive indications may be eligible under specific criteria. Cosmetic revision is generally not eligible; we discuss this individually.

Facial Scar Revision Surgery

Request a Consultation

If you're considering facial scar revision surgery, I invite you to schedule a private consultation. We’ll assess scar type, orientation, and surrounding anatomy, then confirm whether non‑surgical therapy, injections, resurfacing, surgical revision, or a staged combination best suits you.