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Scars can form after acne, surgery, trauma, burns, or rapid stretching of the skin. They are not all built the same, which is why a single treatment rarely fits every patient.
In my clinic, the best results usually come from matching the scar type to the right technology. Fractional laser, microneedling, PRP, subcision, and carefully selected fillers can all play a role when the plan is individualized.
Atrophic scars sit below the skin surface and are common after acne. Hypertrophic scars and keloids are raised and behave very differently. Stretch marks are another category with their own treatment logic.
I also consider scar age, color, skin tone, sun exposure, and whether there is tethering beneath the skin. A fresh scar is managed differently from a mature one that has been stable for years.
Fractional laser creates controlled micro-injury that stimulates remodeling. It is often useful for textural irregularity, acne scars, and selected surgical scars when downtime is acceptable.
Microneedling is a lower-downtime option that promotes collagen renewal and can be combined with PRP. Subcision is especially helpful for rolling scars that are pulled downward by fibrous bands. In some depressed scars, a small amount of filler can improve contour while collagen remodeling continues.
Dr. Gemici: The goal is improvement, not a false promise of total erasure. Good scar treatment is progressive, layered, and based on morphology.
Many scars have more than one problem at the same time: surface irregularity, volume loss, redness, pigment change, and tethering. That is why combination treatment is often more effective than repeating a single method.
A common example is subcision first, then microneedling or fractional laser, with PRP added when healing support is useful. The protocol depends on healing capacity, budget, social downtime, and skin type.
Scar treatment takes patience. Improvement is usually gradual and measured over a series of sessions rather than a single visit. Fresh scars often respond faster than old, fibrotic scars.
Sun protection is essential after any energy-based or needling procedure. Patients must also be screened for active acne, infection, keloid tendency, medication issues, and post-inflammatory pigmentation risk before treatment begins.
Usually no. The realistic goal is to soften texture, reduce depth, improve color, and make the scar less noticeable.
Atrophic acne scars and selected surgical scars often respond well, but the exact choice depends on depth, tethering, skin type, and downtime tolerance.
Most patients need a series rather than a single session. A common plan is 3-6 treatments, sometimes more for older or mixed scar patterns.

Trusted & Professional
Dr. Hamza Gemici is a medical aesthetic physician based in Ataşehir, Istanbul. His practice focuses on natural anti-aging and subtle facial harmonization using botulinum toxin, dermal fillers, periocular rejuvenation and skin quality procedures. All treatments are performed with FDA-approved products under physician-guided protocols.