if you squeeze a spot or pick it until it bleeds, it can leave a scar, and like all scars they usually fade with age, creams to be honest, do absolutly nothing in the long run!
well you cant ever get rid of one of theese however you can help reduce the appearance of it i suggest mostiuerising cream this will hydrate the skin and the appearance should fade out. you could try some bio-oil. im thee meantime just cover it up with foundation or concealer (:
it usually scabs over and scars.
They are not disgusted as long as the wound is healed.
Scabs fall off naturally when fully healed but you can pull a scab off whenever the injury is healed enough not to cause serious damage from removal.
You should not pick the scabs from impetigo, but if any yellow crust has formed overnight, you should remove it.
scabs are not "just" dried blood, they're formed by a chemical reaction, mainly of polimerized proteins and are quit water proof.
because when you bleed the blood hardens and turns into scabs
No. Scabs are formed when blood and body fluids dry on a wound. They are your bodies natural defense against germs, kind of a natural band aid. ----- Boogers are dried mucous (or snot) from your sinus cavities that deposit in your nose and dry when exposed to air. ------ No, they are not made of nasal mucous. Scabs are the result of new skin cells forming a protective crust around a healing wound.
yes in fact they do.. you may notice there are small black dots on the scalp if you scratched your scalp and looked under the nail you may see little black dots.. but do NT confuse this with scabs
you get scabs when you scratch and your blood hardens when you leave it untreated.
went to doctor and he gave me steroids and the sores on my scalp healed and went away.
You probably had measles, German measles or chicken pox or even a simple outbreak of dermatitis. Chicken pox will leave scares when you scratched at the scabs. If you have these scares I would figure you had chicken pox.
Yes, he took the scabs off, and he and his assistant drank it.