Diary of Traditional Chinese Medicine Treatment for Scar Ulceration (In Trial) (Failed)

by xiny1708 on 2012-03-09 11:00:20

Qiuyunfeng Scar Repair and Plastic Surgery Aesthetic Specialty Hospital was founded in 1993 by Ms. Li Yueqiu, the first person to use non-surgical scar repair methods. It is one of the first national trusted medical institutions for scar repair in Qingdao and a unit trusted by consumers in the beauty industry. After more than ten years of innovative development, it now enjoys an extremely high reputation domestically. It is currently the most historically significant, largest scale, most comprehensive project, and best image integrated beauty medical institution in the Island City area. Whether in the field of non-surgical scar repair technology or plastic surgery aesthetics technology, it holds a leading position in the country.

Website: http://www.qiuyunfeng.com/

Free reservation: 13791808612

Scar repair QQ groups:

Scar Repair Group ① (187598289); Scar Repair Group ② (43489967); Scar Repair Group ③ (91182807); Acne, Acne Scars, Pimples (187599022); Scar Repair Group ⑤ (187948057); Scar Repair Group ⑥ (187948805)

Various cities are listed where services might be available or patients come from.

On October 31st, after arriving home in the afternoon, I immediately treated the wound, applying traditional Chinese medicine to the wound surface. However, it couldn't be exposed as I feared the medicine would stick to clothes. So, I soaked the medicine into a band-aid and then applied it for sealed packaging. At midnight, I tore it off to reapply the medicine.

On November 1st, when I woke up in the morning and took off the band-aid to check, I was surprised to see that it wasn't dry yet and still had water flowing. I used paper towels to absorb the moisture and reapplied the medicine. In the evening, after returning home and opening it to check, the small wound was dry, and the larger one also seemed dry, but the band-aid stuck and couldn't be peeled off. I changed the band-aid on the smaller wound while continuing to apply medicine on the larger one, hoping to soak it a bit more. However, I accidentally tore off the band-aid, which unfortunately also tore off the newly formed epithelium. I had no choice but to use my own method again: cutting two layers of gauze to the size of the wound, applying medicine so that the gauze was fully saturated with the drug, and then covering it with a band-aid for sealed packaging. The wound felt a little spicy.

On November 2nd, when I woke up in the morning, I quickly checked the wound. After peeling off the band-aid, I saw that the gauze soaked with medicine had dried, and the small wound had also dried and scabbed over. I estimated that the medicine was taking effect. In the afternoon, although the small wound was dry, pressing it down seemed like there was water inside. After communicating with the pharmaceutical merchant, they suggested puncturing it with a needle to drain the pus. Therefore, I made an appointment with Dr. Sun for changing the dressing treatment. Dr. Sun punctured the wound with a needlehead to try and suck out the fluid inside, but it turned out to be pus, which could only be squeezed out with cotton swabs pressing on the wound, causing some pain. Then, medicine was reapplied, and the wound was covered with a band-aid for sealed packaging. Alas! After returning home, I found that Dr. Sun's dressing-changing skills were not as good as mine, so I had to change the dressing myself again, reapplying the medicine and sealing it with gauze. (Today, Dr. Sun was surprised at my scars, saying they had flattened significantly. Haha!)

On November 3rd, when I opened it to check today, the larger wound started healing from the outside inward, leaving only the middle part unhealed; the smaller one was already dry. Continue applying medicine and using band-aids for sealed packaging.

In the afternoon, I noticed that the inflamed scar, after yesterday's dressing change treatment, was still swollen with pus today. Dang, it had already scabbed over, but underneath it was still inflamed with pus. This time, I wouldn't go to the hospital, let's solve it ourselves.

I took out the needle I brought back from Beijing, disinfected it with alcohol, and gently punctured it at the edge of the scar. Wow, blood immediately gushed out. I slowly absorbed it with paper towels and pressed hard on the scar to squeeze out secretions. Who knew it would be uncontrollable, feeling like all the blood inside was squeezed out, making the scar flatten significantly. So, I kept puncturing around the scar with the needle and pressed hard on the scar with paper towels to squeeze out the blood until the scar was dry and nothing could be squeezed out anymore.

My personal feeling is that it seems there was a lot of stagnant blood inside, and squeezing it out helps the wound heal better.

Some people say, won't it easily get infected? Actually, I didn't think about these issues much, nor did I worry too much. The only thought at the time was to quickly drain the pus.

In the evening, I dared not continue using Chinese medicine because it seemed slow to take effect. After using it, the inflammation continued without any anti-inflammatory effects. After bathing, the scab softened, and after peeling it off, the scar still had a broken wound. Growth factor was applied, and the wound was covered with a band-aid for sealed packaging.

Summary: After three days of using Chinese medicine to treat the wound, there was no improvement, so it was declared a failure! Start using growth factors to promote healing.