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According to Safe Kids Worldwide, falls are the leading cause of accidental injury for kids – making up more than half of non-fatal injuries in children.
And every year, more than two million children end up in hospital emergency rooms for injuries following a fall.
Often those injuries are to the head or face, leading parents to wonder: does my child need stitches, and will they leave a scar?
Three-year-old Zyan is such a case. He was running around at home and ran into a sharp corner.
The ensuing cut on his eyebrow is small, but deep.
“When you see a cut, you have to decide whether it will require stitches,” says Dr. David Goo, with Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta. “One of the things that we look at is, does it gape open? And when [Zyan’s] mom looked at it, and cleaned it up, it did fall apart or open up. So, lacerations that gape open or that are long or that might cause significant scarring should be sutured.”
The doctor uses a topical painkiller and absorbable stitches – that will dissolve as the wound heals over the next several days.
“And then he’ll have no scar and it’ll be right in his eyebrow,” says Dr. Goo. “ He won’t have to come back. So that saves a parent time, it saves a child pain – and it saves everybody a little bit of money.”
The doctor says parents should use sun block on the wound to prevent sunburn, as well as vitamin E oil to reduce scarring.
And, Dr. Goo says, parents should be patient.
“We tell parents not to look at the scar in terms of the final, cosmetic result for at least one year – because it takes a long time before the pigment or the coloring comes back, and before the wound heals up. The scar formation happens fairly quickly – within the first six weeks. But the actual, final cosmetic outcome takes a lot longer before it completely heals.”
By then Zyan’s cut, along with the stitches and the scar, should all be a distant and fading memory.
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