Types of keloids
Scar type
|
Characteristics
|
Maturation
|
Minor keloid
|
- Focally raised
- Pruritic
- Extends beyond burn borders
- May have genetic component for keloid development
- Typical site: earlobes
|
- May develop one year after burn
- Does not regress spontaneously
- Recurrence generally follows surgical excision
|
Major keloid
|
- Large (>0.5 cm)
- Painful
- Pruritic
- Extends beyond burn borders over normal tissue
- Can result even from minor trauma
|
- Does not spontaneously regress
- Can continue to progress in size over the years
|
Available Product In HKGU
Generic name
|
Brand name
|
Triamcinolone
Acetonide 40mg/ml Inj
|
Kenacort-A
|
Minor
keloids (<0.5 cm)
- Triamcinolone acetonide 10 to 40 mg/mL
- Repeated at four-week intervals
- Intralesional corticosteroid injections are
painful. For local anesthesia, EMLA cream may be applied under occlusion for
1.5 hours before injection
- Second-line therapies, intralesional 5-FU in
combination with intralesional corticosteroids (0.9 mL of 5-fluorouracil 50 mg/mL plus 0.1 mL of Triamcinolone acetonide 40 mg/mL)
Major keloids (>0.5cm)
- Intralesional Triamcinolone acetonide 40 mg/mL
- Repeated at intervals of three to four weeks for
four to six months
REFERENCE :
http://www.aafp.org/afp/2009/0801/p253.html
Indian Journal Of Dermatology, Venereology & Leprology
Uptodate