Updated 3/2017-- photos and all links (except to my own posts) removed as many no longer active. 
I am often asked "What can I do to get rid of my stretch  marks?" The short (honest) answer is nothing. Stretch marks are scars. The  longer answer is addressed here---causes and ways to improve their appearance. 
Striae distensae (stretch mark) is a common skin condition. It  rarely causes any significant medical problem. However, striae can be of  significant emotional distress to those affected. They represent linear  dermal scars accompanied by epidermal atrophy. (photo  credit) 
Stretch marks affect skin that is subjected to continuous and  progressive stretching. Common predisposing circumstances for the development of  stretch marks include: those which involve a physical stretching of the skin,  such as rapid weight gain or adolescent growth spurts, and others that involve  hormonal changes, such as chronic steroid medication use or Cushing  syndrome (increased adrenal cortical activity). Genetic factors could  certainly play a role, although this is not fully understood.[I have never seen  stretch marks occur from augmentation mammoplasty or soft tissue expanders, nor  are they ever listed as a possible complication of those surgeries.] 
Regardless of their causes, all stretch marks follow a natural  course of progression. An early sign of stretch marks developing is when an area  of skin becomes flattened and thin with a pink color. The area may occasionally  be itchy. Soon reddish or purplish lines develop (striae rubra). Over time these  lighten to become whitish or flesh-colored and much less conspicuous. Stretch  marks are usually several centimeters long and 1-10 mm wide. Those caused by  corticosteroid use or Cushing's syndrome are often larger and wider and may  involve other regions, including the face. 
There are many treatments available, ranging from therapy  applied to the skin, laser therapy, and even more invasive surgical methods.  Unfortunately, stretch marks remain a tricky problem to target, in which no  established treatment exists. Recent studies have evaluated laser treatment on  stretch marks of various ages, topical 0.1% tretinoin  cream applied to early clinically active stretch marks, and treatment of mature  stretch marks with two different topical regimens (including glycolic acid,  L-ascorbic acid, zinc sulfate, and tyrosine vs glycolic acid, and tretinoin  emollient cream). Treatment with laser and treatment with glycolic acid in  combination with 0.05% tretinoin emollient cream appeared to increase the  elastic content in the treated lesions, improving the appearance of the  striae. (Please, note none of these treatments remove the stretch mark. They  only improve the appearance of the stretch mark.) In particular, clinical  improvement in the laser treated group continued for 6 months or more after  treatment.
  The  left photo is prior to treatment with tretinoin 0.1% cream, the right is after 8  weeks of treatment (same person). I don't really appreciate the improvement, do  you? photo credit
The only way to truly remove (or get rid of) a stretch mark is  to surgically excise it. If your stretch marks happen to "sit" in the area of  your central lower abdomen, then you may be able to have yours removed by an abdominoplasty.  Most of us aren't that fortunate. Many of us have them on our hips or outer  thighs from puberty. If you are a teenager, the stretch marks you have now that  are in that bright pink or purple stage will fade. That alone will make them  less visible. 
References
Striae Distensae by Samer Alaiti, MD--eMedicine article
Stretch marks (striae)--DermNet NZ
Stretch Marks by Patrice Hyde, MD--Kid's Health article
Stretch Marks--Virtual Medical Centre
Photo Gallery of Stretch Marks
Derm Atlas--Stretch Marks




1 comment:
Nice post--thank you for teaching me something!
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