Top scarring Providers in Cambridge

Best Scarring Clinics in Cambridge

Cambridge Contour Clinic

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Cambridge Contour Clinic

Skin care clinic

Rating
(165 reviews)
Location
Cambridge CB4 1JY, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Cambridge Dermatology Clinic

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Cambridge Dermatology Clinic
CQC

Dermatologist

Rating
(13 reviews)
Location
Cambridge CB2 9LN, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Cambridge Skin Clinic

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Cambridge Skin Clinic

Skin care clinic

Rating
(9 reviews)
Location
Cambridge CB5 8LA, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Dr Anton Alexandroff At Spire Cambridge Lea Hospital

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Dr Anton Alexandroff At
CQC

Dermatologist

Rating
(2 reviews)
Location
Cambridge CB24 9EL, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Dr Anton Alexandroff Consultant Dermatologist Frcp Phd Frsm Faad Cambridge Nuffield Health Hospital

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Dr Anton Alexandroff Consultant
CQC

Dermatologist

Rating
(24 reviews)
Location
Cambridge CB2 8AF, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Dr Mountis Skin Clinic

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Dr Mountis Skin Clinic
CQC

Skin care clinic

Rating
(7 reviews)
Location
Cambridge CB2 9LG, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Hardwick Clinic

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Hardwick Clinic
CQCSave Face

Doctor

Rating
(87 reviews)
Location
Cambridge CB23 7QJ, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Rebecca Davis

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Rebecca Davis

Dermatologist

Rating
(1 reviews)
Location
Cambridge CB2 1NT, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Scarring Treatment in Cambridge

Scarring is what happens when your skin heals after an injury or trauma. When your skin gets damaged, your body rushes in white blood cells to clean up, then produces collagen to patch the area. But the collagen fibres dont lay down in that neat, random basket weave we see in normal skin. Instead they align in one direction, forming fibrous scar tissue. That patch repairs the wound but often looks or feels different from the surrounding skin. Some scars are flat, some raised, some sunken, some red, some white. Its just the way the body heals itself but it leaves a mark.
Our dataset currently has 13 clinic(s), with approximately 470 reviews and an average rating of 4.930769231.

Medical Infrastructure:

    • Addenbrooke’s Hospital (Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust)
    • Cambridge Biomedical Campus
    • Spire Cambridge Lea Hospital (private)
    • Multiple CQC-registered independent clinics

Local Aethetics Market:

    Highly mature, specialist-driven dermatology and aesthetic market

Goals of Scarring Treatment

  • In medical or cosmetic scar treatment its about reducing how obvious a scar is
  • Improve colour, texture, thickness or shape of the scar tissue
  • Restore a more normal appearance to the skin surface
  • Sometimes relieve itching, tightness, or movement restriction if the scar affects function
  • Help with psychosocial comfort by making scars less noticeable.

Scarring Treatment Options

Medical & Non-Surgical Approaches

  • Non-invasive options like silicone gel sheeting and dressings are low-risk first steps, often recommended universally for hypertrophic or keloid scars.
  • Injectables like steroid injections help flatten raised scars but can cause skin thinning in some cases
  • Laser and resurfacing treat texture and pigmentation but often need multiple sessions
  • Surgery (scar revision) is more aggressive but is reserved for complex scars and may still leave a smaller, cleaner scar.

Pros of Scarring Treatment

  • Scars are a necessary part of healing so you survive injuries rather than open wounds persisting
  • Many scars fade over time naturally
  • With treatment you can often soften, flatten, and reduce visibility
  • Non-invasive options like silicone gel or dressings have very low risk.

Cons of Scarring Treatment

  • Scars dont completely disappear; treatments reduce but dont erase them
  • Some scars can be itchy, painful, or restrict movement if over joints
  • More aggressive treatments involve cost, downtime, discomfort and variable results
  • Certain scars like keloids may worsen or recur even after treatment.

Cost of Scarring Treatment in Cambridge

  • Simple clinic consultation roughly GBP 100-GBP 200
  • Steroid injections around GBP 250-GBP 300 each session
  • Laser sessions GBP 400-GBP 990 per session or more for advanced CO2 lasers
  • Scar revision surgery from around GBP 500 up to GBP 3,500 or more depending on complexity
  • Packages for multiple laser sessions can be thousands (GBP 2,000-GBP 7,500) for moderate-severe acne scarring in London.
  • Severity and type of scar
  • Size and location of treatment area
  • Clinic location (London tends to be higher)
  • Experience and medical credentials of practitioner
  • Technology used (advanced fractional CO2 lasers usually cost more)
  • Number of sessions required.

Accessibility

Public transport:

    • Major rail connections to London King’s Cross and Liverpool Street
    • Extensive bus network
    • Cycle-friendly infrastructure

Parking availability:

    • Limited city-centre parking
    • Private clinic and hospital parking available
    • Park-and-ride system widely used

Clinic distribution:

    Clinics distributed between city centre, biomedical campus and suburban medical clusters

Airport proximity:

    • Approximately 45 minutes to London Stansted Airport
    • Around 1.5 hours to Heathrow

Preparing for Your Scarring Appointment

  • Let wounds heal fully before starting treatments
  • Follow clinician advice on skin care and sun protection
  • Avoid tobacco, poor nutrition that may slow healing
  • Discuss medications that affect bleeding or healing before surgical options
Many treatments (like laser or injections) may need multiple sessions spaced weeks apart and occasional follow-ups depending on scar response.

Treatment Safety & Local Regulations

Non-invasive options like silicone sheets are painlessInjections and lasers may cause discomfort or mild pain requiring numbingSurgical scar revision carries surgical risks such as infection, bleeding, and recurrenceFollow aftercare instructions closely to minimise risks

Depends on method. Topical and silicone are painless; injections and lasers have varying discomfort; surgery uses anaesthesia but recovery can be sore.

    There are specific NHS clinical policies about timing and indications for scar revision; NICE guidance focuses on surgical site infection but not detailed cosmetic scar guidelines; international evidence-based scar management recommendations exist.

    Local regulatory authority:

      • Care Quality Commission (CQC) for independent healthcare providers
      • General Medical Council (GMC) for doctors
      • Nursing and Midwifery Council (NMC) for nurse prescribers

    Private insurance usage locally:

      • High relative to UK average
      • Strong presence of insured dermatology consultations via Bupa, AXA, Aviva and others

    Cosmetic finance availability:

      Common for higher-value procedures (laser courses, HIFU, advanced injectables)

    Who Is a Good Candidate?

    • Anyone with scars that bother them cosmetically, cause discomfort or limit movement, once the scar has matured (often around 12-18 months from injury).

    Choosing a Clinic

    • A qualified dermatologist or plastic surgeon with scar management experience
    • Membership in UK professional bodies (British Association of Dermatologists etc)
    • Before/after photos of similar scars theyve treated
    • Clear discussion of realistic outcomes, risks, and costs
    • Good aftercare support and honest consent process
    Current average rating citywide: 4.930769231

    Recovery & Long-Term Results

    • Silicone gel and dressings have no downtime
    • Laser treatments may cause redness and swelling for days to weeks
    • Surgery may need days to weeks off normal activity
    • Injections might leave temporary bruising and tenderness
    • Redness, swelling, pigment changes, discomfort, scab or blister formation, infection (rare with good care)
    Aftercare:
    • Non-invasive options like silicone gel sheeting and dressings are low-risk first steps, often recommended universally for hypertrophic or keloid scars.
    • Injectables like steroid injections help flatten raised scars but can cause skin thinning in some cases
    • Laser and resurfacing treat texture and pigmentation but often need multiple sessions
    • Surgery (scar revision) is more aggressive but is reserved for complex scars and may still leave a smaller, cleaner scar.