Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks, PPs. (And I'm sorry for what your kids went through.) The doctor said that the scar will be permanent and there's nothing that can really be done about it afterward or down the road. I will definitely add the "bad ass/survivor" view to our conversation!
He sounds like a real peach. Is getting a plastic surgeon involved an option?
And while it may always be there, I will echo the other PP - staying out of the sun and religiously using Maderma and Vitamin E for a long time does help.
For telling the truth? What exactly do you expect him to do?
I would like him to recognize he's talking to a 10 yo, and act accordingly. Which it doesn't sound like he did.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks, PPs. (And I'm sorry for what your kids went through.) The doctor said that the scar will be permanent and there's nothing that can really be done about it afterward or down the road. I will definitely add the "bad ass/survivor" view to our conversation!
He sounds like a real peach. Is getting a plastic surgeon involved an option?
And while it may always be there, I will echo the other PP - staying out of the sun and religiously using Maderma and Vitamin E for a long time does help.
He's a pediatric dermatologist who deals with vascular malformations, and he was sympathetic but direct, so I assumed he was telling it straight and not sugarcoating.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks, PPs. (And I'm sorry for what your kids went through.) The doctor said that the scar will be permanent and there's nothing that can really be done about it afterward or down the road. I will definitely add the "bad ass/survivor" view to our conversation!
He sounds like a real peach. Is getting a plastic surgeon involved an option?
And while it may always be there, I will echo the other PP - staying out of the sun and religiously using Maderma and Vitamin E for a long time does help.
For telling the truth? What exactly do you expect him to do?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks, PPs. (And I'm sorry for what your kids went through.) The doctor said that the scar will be permanent and there's nothing that can really be done about it afterward or down the road. I will definitely add the "bad ass/survivor" view to our conversation!
He sounds like a real peach. Is getting a plastic surgeon involved an option?
And while it may always be there, I will echo the other PP - staying out of the sun and religiously using Maderma and Vitamin E for a long time does help.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks, PPs. (And I'm sorry for what your kids went through.) The doctor said that the scar will be permanent and there's nothing that can really be done about it afterward or down the road. I will definitely add the "bad ass/survivor" view to our conversation!
He sounds like a real peach. Is getting a plastic surgeon involved an option?
And while it may always be there, I will echo the other PP - staying out of the sun and religiously using Maderma and Vitamin E for a long time does help.

Anonymous wrote:Tell her to stay out of the sun leading up to and following the surgery. Use Vitamin E oil and Maderma and all that scar reduction crap. It works.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks, PPs. (And I'm sorry for what your kids went through.) The doctor said that the scar will be permanent and there's nothing that can really be done about it afterward or down the road. I will definitely add the "bad ass/survivor" view to our conversation!
She is pretty upset about this. Has anyone btdt with their child and something like this, and can you share what made them feel better? I keep telling her that between looks and use, it's more important to have full and comfortable use of her arm, and she intellectually agrees but she's pretty bummed. She understands that the surgery isn't that bad and that her situation could be worse, but she's only 10 and she's sad and crying about it. Part of it is, I'm sure, being scared of the surgery, but most of her emotions are focused on the scar. Thanks for any advice.