How can I reduce my risk of acne scars?
Table of Contents
Key takeaways
- This rewrite is classified as medical_condition and focuses on the reader's practical question.
- Symptoms and treatment choices should be assessed in context rather than self-diagnosed from one sign alone.
- Options may help, but suitability should be confirmed by an appropriate clinician.
- Use NHS 111 for urgent advice if symptoms are severe, sudden or worrying. Call 999 in a life-threatening emergency.
Overview
Acne scars can follow deeper inflammation, especially nodules and cysts. Picking, delayed treatment and ongoing active acne can increase the chance of marks or scarring.
Why it happens
Androgens can increase sebum production. Oil and dead skin cells may block follicles, while Cutibacterium acnes and local immune activity can add inflammation. Deeper inflammation can damage collagen and leave indented or raised scars.
Assessment and options
A pharmacist, GP or dermatologist can assess acne type, scarring risk, skin tone, pregnancy possibility and current medicines. Options may include skincare changes, non-prescription treatments, prescribed topical treatments, oral medicines or scar procedures once active acne is controlled.
When to seek medical advice
Seek advice for painful, cystic, scarring, persistent or widespread acne, acne that affects mood, or acne during pregnancy. Use NHS 111 for urgent advice if a skin infection spreads or symptoms are severe, and call 999 in a life-threatening emergency.
Sources
- NHS, Acne: https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/acne/
Relevance: NHS explains acne symptoms, causes, self-care, treatment options and when to seek medical advice. - NICE NG198, Acne vulgaris: management: https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/ng198/chapter/Recommendations
Relevance: NICE gives UK recommendations on acne assessment, treatment choices, referral and pregnancy-related cautions. - British Association of Dermatologists, Acne: https://www.bad.org.uk/pils/acne/
Relevance: BAD provides dermatologist-reviewed patient information on acne causes, treatments and scarring.
Disclaimer
Educational only. Results vary. Not a cure. Use NHS 111 for urgent advice if symptoms are severe, sudden or worrying. Call 999 in a life-threatening emergency.







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