---
title: "Xanthelasma Removal in Gurgaon — Cost, Recovery \u0026 Laser Options | Dr. Shikha Bansal"
description: "Xanthelasma removal in Gurgaon by Dr. Shikha Bansal — surgical excision, CO2 laser, radiofrequency, or chemical cauterisation, chosen by lesion size and skin type. Straight answers on cost, recovery, and recurrence."
url: https://drshikhabansal.com/procedures/xanthelasma/
author: "Dr. Shikha Bansal"
category: "face"
---


# Xanthelasma Removal in Gurgaon

> Xanthelasma are soft yellowish cholesterol deposits that form on the eyelids, most often at the inner corner of the upper or lower lid. Xanthelasma removal at Dr. Shikha Bansal's clinic in Gurgaon is done by surgical excision, CO2 laser ablation, radiofrequency, or chemical cauterisation — the choice depends on the size, depth, and exact location of the plaque. This page covers how each technique is chosen, what recovery actually looks like, what the procedure costs in Gurgaon, and when a lipid work-up is worth doing alongside.


## Benefits

- Removes the yellow plaque fully — not trimmed flat and left behind
- Technique matched to the lesion: excision, laser, radiofrequency, or chemical
- Local anaesthesia, same-day procedure, no hospital admission
- Eyelid-crease incision on excision cases so the scar settles as a fine line
- Written cost quote at consultation with no surprise additions on the day
- Lipid screening flagged when appropriate, not missed in a cosmetic-only workup

## What xanthelasma is, and why it appears on the eyelids

Xanthelasma — more precisely, xanthelasma palpebrarum — are flat or slightly raised yellow plaques that sit in the thin skin of the eyelid. Under the microscope they are collections of lipid-laden macrophages (foam cells) in the dermis. They are benign, painless, and do not threaten vision, but they are almost always the first thing the patient sees in the mirror, and they grow slowly over months to years rather than disappearing on their own.

Roughly half the patients with xanthelasma have elevated blood lipids — high LDL, low HDL, or a familial dyslipidaemia — and the other half have a completely normal lipid profile. The eyelid skin is thin, low in subcutaneous fat, and prone to showing lipid deposits that would be invisible anywhere else on the face. That is why the lesions favour the eyelids rather than, say, the cheek.

New xanthelasma often appear in pairs on the inner corner of the upper lid, and then similar lesions may show up symmetrically on the lower lid. Patients in Gurgaon and Delhi NCR most commonly come in when the plaque has grown large enough to be noticed in photographs or across the dinner table.


## Xanthelasma removal techniques — surgical, laser, radiofrequency, and chemical

There is no single best technique for xanthelasma removal. The right approach depends on how big the plaque is, how deep it sits, whether it is on the upper or lower lid, and the patient's skin tone. All four options are used at the clinic, and the technique is chosen at consultation.

**Surgical excision** is the default for larger plaques and for deposits that extend deeper into the dermis. A thin ellipse of skin containing the plaque is removed and the wound is closed with fine sutures, placed to follow the natural eyelid crease so the scar settles as a thin line. This is the most reliable way to remove thick or recurrent plaques completely, and is often combined with a small upper eyelid skin tuck when there is coexisting skin excess. For a related discussion on eyelid surgery planning, see the [blepharoplasty page](/procedures/blepharoplasty/).

**CO2 laser ablation** works well for flat, superficial plaques and for patients who want to avoid a suture line. The laser removes the deposit layer by layer under local anaesthesia. Scars are usually minimal, but pigmentation change (a lighter patch) can occur in medium-to-dark Indian skin, and this is discussed openly before the procedure.

**Radiofrequency ablation** uses a fine-tipped electrode to vaporise the plaque with precise control of depth. It is a good middle ground between excision and laser — less pigmentary change than CO2 laser on some skin types, less downtime than a sutured excision — and is often used for small to medium lesions on the upper lid.

**Chemical cauterisation** (typically with trichloroacetic acid applied in a carefully controlled concentration) is reserved for very superficial, flat plaques. It is the least invasive option, but it works only for the thinnest deposits and often needs more than one session. It is not used on the lower lid margin because of the risk to the tear film.

Cryotherapy — freezing the plaque with liquid nitrogen — is mentioned in some older textbooks but is rarely used on the eyelid today because the risk of pigmentary change is higher than with the options above.


## How the technique is matched to the lesion

At the consultation the eyelids are examined in good light and the plaques are measured. Photographs are taken to track before-and-after changes. The key questions are: how thick is the plaque, how close is it to the lash line, how close is it to the inner canthus and tear duct, and how forgiving is the patient's skin to pigmentary change.

**Flat, small, superficial plaque away from the lid margin** — laser or radiofrequency, one session, minimal downtime.

**Flat, superficial plaque in a patient who wants the cheapest first-line option** — chemical cauterisation, usually across two to three sessions.

**Thick or raised plaque, or any plaque larger than about 10 mm** — surgical excision along the eyelid crease. This gives the cleanest removal and the most reliable non-recurrence, at the cost of a fine suture line that fades over weeks.

**Plaque extending onto both upper and lower lid** — planned in stages, with the upper lid treated first and the lower lid treated once the upper has healed, usually 4 to 6 weeks later.

**Recurrent xanthelasma that came back after treatment elsewhere** — the recurrence is examined and the previous method is noted. Re-treatment is usually by surgical excision, because whatever method was used the first time has already proven insufficient for that patient's tissue.


## The procedure, from consultation to same-day discharge

The first consultation takes about 20 to 30 minutes. The eyelids are examined, the plaques are measured and photographed, and the patient is asked about previous treatments, current medications (especially blood thinners), and any history of keloid or hypertrophic scarring. A lipid profile is recommended when a recent one is not available, particularly in patients under 40 or with a family history of early cardiac disease — xanthelasma can be the first visible sign of a lipid disorder that deserves a medical work-up regardless of the cosmetic concern.

The procedure itself is performed as a day case at the clinic, under local anaesthesia. A small amount of lignocaine with adrenaline is injected into the eyelid skin, and after a few minutes of numbness the actual removal begins. A surgical excision typically takes 20 to 30 minutes; a laser or radiofrequency session takes 15 to 20 minutes. Chemical cauterisation is quicker, usually under 10 minutes of contact time, but the full visit runs 30 minutes including aftercare instructions.

The patient walks in, the procedure is done, and the patient walks out the same day. Driving is fine after laser, radiofrequency, or chemical treatment. After a surgical excision, being driven home is easier because the patch of gauze over the eyelid is awkward for the first hour.


## Recovery after xanthelasma removal, week by week

Recovery depends on which technique was used, but follows a fairly predictable pattern.

**Day 0 to Day 3**: mild swelling and bruising of the eyelid is expected, particularly after surgical excision. A small scab forms over the treated area after laser or radiofrequency. Cold compresses are used for the first 24 hours. The eye itself is not patched — the eyelid is treated, not the globe.

**Day 4 to Day 7**: swelling settles. After surgical excision, fine sutures are removed around day 5 to 7. After laser or radiofrequency the scab begins to separate at its edges. Desk work is comfortable from day 3 or 4 in most cases.

**Week 2 to Week 3**: scab has fallen off after laser or radiofrequency, leaving pink skin that will continue to lighten. The suture line from excision is pink and slightly raised. Make-up can usually be reintroduced from day 10 to 14, once the skin is fully closed.

**Week 4 to Week 6**: pinkness fades noticeably. This is the window when patients typically say the eyelid "looks normal again" in photographs.

**Month 3 to Month 6**: final colour and texture settle. The excision scar becomes a thin line that follows the natural eyelid crease. After laser or radiofrequency, any residual pigmentary change either resolves or becomes permanent by this point — in medium-to-dark Indian skin the small risk of a slightly lighter patch is assessed at the 3-month mark.

The recovery time after xanthelasma laser removal specifically is shorter on the surface — no sutures to take out, no suture line — but the pigment maturation takes the same 3 to 6 months as any other laser treatment on eyelid skin.


## Cost of xanthelasma removal in Gurgaon

Xanthelasma removal at Dr. Shikha Bansal's clinic in Gurgaon typically costs between ₹15,000 and ₹25,000 per session depending on the extent of the lesions, the technique used, and whether one or both eyelids are being treated. Small single-lesion chemical cauterisation or a limited radiofrequency session sits at the lower end of the range. A bilateral surgical excision covering both upper lids, or a combined upper-and-lower treatment staged across two visits, sits at the upper end. Very extensive or revision cases may go beyond this range, and that is quoted separately at consultation.

The main things that move the quote: the size and number of plaques, the technique chosen (laser and radiofrequency sessions are priced differently from a sutured excision), whether both eyelids are treated in one visit or staged, and whether the case is primary or a revision of a previous treatment elsewhere.

A written quote is given at the end of the consultation. The quote includes surgeon fee, local anaesthesia, consumables, the first dressing, and the follow-up visit for suture removal (when relevant). Lipid profile testing — if the patient has not had one recently — is arranged separately through an external lab and is not bundled into the procedure cost.

Xanthelasma removal is treated as a cosmetic procedure by Indian health insurers and is not covered by standard health insurance, even when elevated cholesterol is documented. The lipid profile itself is sometimes covered under a general health check-up, but the removal is not.


## Why xanthelasma can come back, and how recurrence is reduced

Unlike many other skin lesions, xanthelasma has a real recurrence rate — roughly 20 to 40% across published series, regardless of the technique used. The reason is biological rather than technical: if the patient's lipid metabolism continues to deposit cholesterol in eyelid skin, new plaques will eventually form, usually close to the site of the old ones.

Two things reduce the recurrence rate meaningfully. First, complete removal at the time of the procedure — leaving a thin layer of plaque behind "to avoid a scar" is the most common cause of a visible recurrence within the first year. The excision or ablation aims to go through the full thickness of the deposit, not conservatively. Second, addressing the underlying lipid picture. A patient with high LDL who starts statin therapy and brings their lipid profile into target range has a lower recurrence rate than a patient who has the plaque removed and does nothing else.

Recurrence is discussed openly at the consultation. When new lesions do appear months or years later, they are usually smaller and easier to treat than the original plaques, because the patient catches them early.


## When xanthelasma points to something bigger than a cosmetic issue

Xanthelasma is not dangerous in itself, but in some patients it is a visible marker of an underlying lipid disorder that carries cardiovascular risk. Current literature links xanthelasma — independent of lipid levels — to a modestly higher long-term risk of myocardial infarction and atherosclerotic disease, which is why a lipid profile is recommended for most patients before or alongside removal.

A lipid profile is particularly worth doing in patients under 40 who present with xanthelasma, patients with a family history of early heart disease, and patients with other skin markers of hyperlipidaemia (tendon xanthomata, arcus cornealis at a young age). When the profile is abnormal, a referral to a physician or endocrinologist is made before the cosmetic removal is planned. The plaque can still be removed, but the reason it appeared is worth treating properly.

Patients are not pushed into statin therapy from a plastic surgery clinic — that decision sits with the treating physician. The role here is to flag the signal, order the test, and make sure it does not get lost in the cosmetic conversation.


## Xanthelasma removal in Gurgaon and Delhi NCR — what to expect

The clinic sees patients from across Delhi NCR — Gurgaon, Delhi, Noida, Faridabad, Ghaziabad — for xanthelasma removal. Most cases are single-visit procedures with one follow-up at the one-week mark for suture removal (when applicable) or scab review. Out-of-town patients can share progress photographs over WhatsApp after the first in-person follow-up.

Consultations are by appointment. Walk-ins are accommodated when the calendar allows, but a planned appointment means the consultation is unhurried, photographs are taken properly, and a written quote is handed over before the patient leaves. For patients coming in from Delhi or further, the consultation and the procedure can sometimes be done on the same day when the plaque is small and the technique is laser or radiofrequency. Surgical excisions are booked for a separate day so that the patient is not driving home immediately after the procedure.



## Frequently Asked Questions

### What is the best treatment for xanthelasma removal?

There is no single best treatment. Surgical excision is the most reliable for thick or raised plaques and for recurrent lesions, because it removes the deposit completely in one sitting. CO2 laser and radiofrequency work very well for flat, superficial plaques and leave no suture line. Chemical cauterisation with TCA is a lower-cost first-line option for very thin plaques but often needs more than one session. The technique is matched to the lesion at consultation rather than defaulted to one method.
### How much does xanthelasma removal cost in Gurgaon?

Xanthelasma removal at Dr. Shikha Bansal's clinic in Gurgaon typically costs between ₹15,000 and ₹25,000 per session depending on the extent of the lesions, which technique is used, and whether one or both eyelids are treated in the same visit. Small, single-lesion cases sit at the lower end and larger bilateral cases at the upper end. A written quote is given at the end of the consultation and covers the procedure, local anaesthesia, consumables, and the follow-up visit. Lipid profile testing, when needed, is arranged separately.
### How long does recovery take after xanthelasma laser removal?

After CO2 laser or radiofrequency, the treated area forms a small scab that separates over 7 to 10 days. Desk work is fine from day 3 or 4, and make-up can be reintroduced from day 10 to 14. The skin stays pink for 3 to 6 weeks and then fades to baseline. Final colour settles by the 3-month mark. On medium-to-dark Indian skin there is a small risk of a slightly lighter patch that is discussed before the procedure.
### Does xanthelasma removal leave a scar?

After laser, radiofrequency, or chemical treatment, there is no suture line — only a pink patch that fades over weeks. After surgical excision, there is a fine suture line placed inside the natural eyelid crease, which settles as a thin line that is hard to see at conversational distance by the 3-month mark. The risk of a hypertrophic or keloid scar on eyelid skin is very low, but patients with a personal history of keloid scarring are flagged at consultation.
### Is xanthelasma a plastic surgery procedure?

Xanthelasma removal sits at the overlap of dermatology and plastic surgery. When the plaque is flat and superficial, it is commonly managed as an in-office dermatology procedure with laser, radiofrequency, or chemical cauterisation. When the plaque is thick, raised, recurrent, or extends deeper into the dermis, surgical excision along the eyelid crease — which is a plastic surgery technique — gives the cleanest result and the lowest recurrence rate. Both pathways are available at the clinic.
### Does xanthelasma always mean high cholesterol?

No. Roughly half the patients with xanthelasma have normal blood lipids. The other half have elevated LDL, low HDL, or a familial dyslipidaemia. Even when the lipid profile is normal, current evidence links xanthelasma to a modestly higher long-term cardiovascular risk, so a lipid profile is recommended before or alongside cosmetic removal, especially in patients under 40 or with a family history of early heart disease.
### Can xanthelasma come back after removal?

Yes. Recurrence rates across published series are roughly 20 to 40%, regardless of technique. The two things that reduce recurrence are complete removal at the time of the procedure (rather than trimming the plaque flat and leaving a sliver behind) and addressing the underlying lipid picture when it is abnormal. When recurrence does happen, the new lesions are usually smaller than the original and easier to treat.
### How soon after xanthelasma removal is make-up safe?

Make-up on the treated eyelid is avoided until the skin is fully closed — typically day 10 to 14 after surgical excision (once sutures are out) or day 7 to 10 after laser or radiofrequency (once the scab has separated). Mascara on the lashes themselves is fine earlier. Heavy concealer directly over a fresh wound or scab delays healing and is worth avoiding.


## Related

- [All Procedures](https://drshikhabansal.com/procedures/)
- [About Dr. Shikha Bansal](https://drshikhabansal.com/female-plastic-surgeon-in-gurgaon/)
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