PRP doesn’t erase scars overnight. It works slowly. Quietly. Skin starts repairing from inside. PRP uses your own blood. Sounds odd. But it’s actually the good part — platelets that boost healing. When applied or injected, they push your skin to rebuild.
So yeah, it helps. But not like magic.
Quick breakdown:
That’s the honest version.
Now, picture this.
My friend Karan had those light acne marks. Nothing too deep, but enough to annoy him daily. He tried PRP with microneedling. First session — not much. Second — slight change. By the third? Skin looked clearer. Not flawless. Just… better. More even.
That’s how PRP works. Bit by bit.
Also, patience matters here. If you expect one session glow-up, nah… you’ll be disappointed. Give it a few sessions. Let your skin catch up.
And one more thing — deeper scars usually need more than PRP. That’s just reality. PRP helps, but it’s not the whole solution.
In short — good for improvement, not perfection.
Smooth, not spotless. Better, not brand new.
That’s the real win, honestly.
1. How many PRP sessions are needed for acne scars?
Usually 3–4 sessions. Depends on how deep your scars are.
2. Is PRP better than microneedling alone?
Together works better. PRP boosts healing after microneedling.
3. Does PRP remove acne scars completely?
No, it reduces them. Makes skin smoother, not perfect.