T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
862.1 | Try cocoa butter | NRADM::TRIPPL | | Mon Apr 29 1991 13:41 | 11 |
| I had been told to put pure cocoa butter on the scar, once it's
completely closed. In the states it's sold in the drugstore with the
burn remedies. I can't say from a personal point of view, mine isn't
terribly noticable, but it's a bikini cut. But the cocoa butter has
helped other surgical scars I own.
Beware of the cocoa butter if you're a "chocoholic", the smell is so
strong it'll drive you to the nearest chocolate bar!!
Lyn
|
862.2 | it takes time. | MAGIC::SANFORD | | Mon Apr 29 1991 13:54 | 6 |
| My son is 20 months and my scar is still quite purple.
I know they were in a hurry to get the baby (he was breech)
so a neat incision wasn't a priority. I know other women
who's scars dissapeared within the 1st year.
|
862.3 | it should turn white and fade....eventually | LEZAH::MINER | Mom...I'm as happy as a shark | Mon Apr 29 1991 14:23 | 7 |
|
The scar should lighten up and turn nearly white. It does depend where
it is though. If it is in a place where your underwear or pantyhose
rubs against it, this will irritate it and slow down the process. I
have had 3 caesareans and have seen the process several times!
-dorothy
|
862.4 | No scar ... | TOPDOC::FAIRBANKS | | Mon Apr 29 1991 15:29 | 7 |
| I've had 2 caesareans. Within 9 months after each, the scar had totally
disappeared. I cannot tell where either incision was. When I was being
prepped for the second (20 months after the first), the doctor tried to
find the scar for the first incision, as he wanted to cut in the same
place. However, he could not find it.
Gracemary
|
862.5 | | ISLNDS::BARR_L | The Pepperoni Killer | Mon Apr 29 1991 16:07 | 8 |
| My son was born via ceasarean 9 months ago and I still have a very
prominent red scar, although it has faded somewhat. I am also still
numb in some areas on my stomach around the scar (the doctor said this
was normal and I may never regain feeling there because they have to
cut some nerves while doing the ceasarean). I guess it just depends
on how big the cut is and how they close it up.
Lori B.
|
862.6 | give it time | WMOIS::REINKE_B | bread and roses | Mon Apr 29 1991 16:12 | 5 |
| My son was born 21 years ago ( :-) ) and my scar tho still visible
(like a crease down the middle of my stomach) is definitely no
longer red.
Bonnie
|
862.7 | | TLE::STOCKSPDS | Cheryl Stocks | Mon Apr 29 1991 16:40 | 7 |
| I think it depends a lot on *your* skin characteristics. My surgical
scars fade to white, but never disappear. I have scars from 20 years
ago that the doc told me would fade and disappear within a couple of
months, and they're not gone. My C-section scars behaved similarly.
I don't think it necessarily has much to do with how the surgery was
done.
cheryl
|
862.8 | Give it time | HYSTER::DELISLE | | Tue Apr 30 1991 10:09 | 8 |
| I'm another one with a C section, and the scar did eventually fade. I
can just barely find it if I look closely. Give it some time, nine
months is not long. And I think it depends on your skin type also.
I'm very fair, Irish descent.
Not that it much matters if it fades, only my husband ever sees THAT
part of me anymore. After four kids, no more bikinis for me! 8*}
|
862.9 | | BUNYIP::QUODLING | LMF-E-SOL, Your Brain is unlicensed... | Tue Apr 30 1991 12:05 | 9 |
| A lot depends on the Doctor. My wife knew at about about 7.5 months that
Andrew had turned, and was to big to comfortably be manipulated around. Her
sister had had an emergency C-Sect several years before, with a vertical scar,
that still showed. My wife expressed concern about this to the doctor, He said
not to worry, He mad a low horizontal incision. Within 12 months, there was no
evidence of scarring, and she was back in some of those stunning bikinis...
q
|
862.10 | | STAR::MACKAY | C'est la vie! | Tue Apr 30 1991 12:31 | 10 |
|
It depends on your skin type. My scar (same incision for 2 sections)
faded to pinkish after 9 months or so. But it was still bumpy after 5
years.
I gave up on bikinis ever since my first kid was born - not due to the
scar, but the stretch marks - they don't go away...
Eva
|
862.11 | Skin type is the answer. | SWAM1::KINNEY_CA | | Tue Apr 30 1991 13:36 | 7 |
| The real determining factor for your C-section scar is the type of skin
you have. If you develop Keloids, which is red-bumpy scarring, you
will experience the same thing with your C-section scar. My scar is so
low, (after two C-sections) that I wouldn't dare wear a bikini that
low. However, I have dark Italian skin and I do not scar. As a result
my scar is not visible, although it is still slightly numb in that
area. (and my baby is six years old)
|
862.12 | 6 yrs old, white and mischievous | PERFCT::WOOLNER | Photographer is fuzzy, underdeveloped and dense | Wed May 01 1991 01:26 | 5 |
| My baby is 6 too, and my bikini-cut scar is white and looks like a
crooked smile : J ... and the right corner of it *still* itches
every once in a while! Sheesh!
Leslie
|
862.13 | mine better second time around | NAC::KNOX | Donna Knox | Wed May 01 1991 13:44 | 11 |
| My first section scar was still red, wide and bumpy after 2 years. The
surgeon used staples to close it.
My second section scar is now 2.3 years old and is white-ish, thin and
smooth. The (different) surgeon used clear surgical tape to close it.
I have very thin, fair, freckled skin, but IMO, it depends more on the
skill of the surgeon closing the incision.
Donna
|
862.14 | ohmigod! WHERE'D it GO?!?!? | BCSE::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Thu May 02 1991 20:20 | 22 |
| My scar, from 2 c-sections, 1 6 years ago, 1 3 years ago, is faded to
the color of the rest of my skin, but you can still feel a 'bump' under
the skin where the scar is. It's a bikini cut, actually slightly lower
than the hair line, which means that in some places the hair isn't all
there along the scar line. For the MOST part, all feeling has
returned, but it's definitely not as sensitive as non-scar areas.
My first one was straight as an arrow, the second is crooked - I'm told
it's because of the epideral and cutting while you're at an angle (as
opposed to the 1st being a spinal and flat on my back). Both were
closed with steri-strips (clear surgical tape), the 1st by default, the
2nd by request, so the only scar is the scar itself - no staple-dots!
Based on just the way the scar looks, I wouldn't hesitate to wear a
bikini -- of course seeing the rest of me and those stretch marks keeps
me out of one (-:
It'll fade and you won't even notice it did!! (-:
Patty
|