Recovery Guides

Scar Care After Plastic Surgery — From Suture Removal to Year One

Scars take 12 to 18 months to mature. Here is what to do at each phase — silicone, massage, sun protection — to give your scar the best chance.

Published 20 April 2026 Updated 8 June 2026 3 min read
Scar Care After Plastic Surgery — From Suture Removal to Year One — Recovery Guides article by Dr. Ümmü Gülsüm Barutcu, board-certified plastic surgeon in Istanbul
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Phase 1 — Suture line protection (weeks 1–3)

Until the surgical tape is removed and the wound is fully epithelialised, the only scar care you need is gentle cleaning with saline and meticulous sun avoidance. Silicone is not yet applied because the wound surface is still open at a microscopic level.

Keep the area dry for the first 48 hours after the dressing is changed. Tension across the scar is the strongest predictor of widening — avoid bending, stretching or any movement that pulls on the suture line.

Phase 2 — Active scar treatment (week 3 to month 6)

  • Silicone gel sheets worn 12–23 hours daily, or silicone gel applied twice daily once tape is off. Silicone is the only topical with strong evidence for hypertrophic scar reduction.
  • Scar massage starting at week 4 — firm circular pressure for 5 minutes, twice daily, softens adhesions and improves tissue glide.
  • SPF 50 mineral sunscreen on any exposed scar for the full first year. UV exposure during this phase causes permanent hyperpigmentation.
  • Avoid hot tubs, saunas and chlorinated pools until week 6 — they macerate the developing scar.

Phase 3 — Maturation (month 6 to month 18)

Scars continue to remodel for up to 18 months, gradually fading from pink to skin tone. A well-cared-for scar at month 12 is dramatically different from one left alone — the difference is almost entirely down to silicone consistency and sun protection during months 3 to 9.

If a scar becomes raised, red or itchy beyond month 3, contact your surgeon. Early intralesional steroid injection or fractional laser treatment is far more effective than waiting for a mature hypertrophic scar.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

When can I start silicone gel?+

Once all suture material is removed and the wound is closed without scabbing — usually around week 3. Starting earlier risks irritation; starting later loses the most active remodelling window.

Are silicone sheets better than gel?+

Sheets give marginally better results for body scars; gel is more practical for facial scars and over joints. Both are evidence-based — consistency matters more than which form.

What about vitamin E or natural oils?+

There is no high-quality evidence vitamin E improves scars; some patients develop contact dermatitis from it. Bio-Oil is moisturising and pleasant but no substitute for silicone.

When can I get a tattoo over a scar?+

Wait a minimum of 12 months. Tattooing immature scar tissue causes pigment migration and can reactivate hypertrophy.

Explore further

Continue your research on the clinic site

Next step

Interested in learning whether this procedure is right for you?

Schedule a personalised consultation with Dr. Ümmü Gülsüm Barutcu in Istanbul to discuss your goals and receive a tailored treatment plan.

The information provided in this article is intended for educational purposes only and should not replace individualized medical advice. Consultation with a qualified plastic surgeon is essential before making decisions regarding aesthetic procedures.
Dr. Ümmü Gülsüm Barutcu

Medically reviewed by Dr. Gülsüm Barutcu

Dr. Ümmü Gülsüm Barutcu

Plastic, Reconstructive and Aesthetic Surgeon · Istanbul, Turkey

Dr. Barutcu cares for international patients with an emphasis on personalised planning, ethical decision-making and natural-looking outcomes. Her practice is built on patient safety, informed consent and an unhurried approach to every consultation.

Last reviewed: 8 June 2026