Often, a finger laceration (cut) needs stitches to bring the two sides of skin closer together. Most cuts will leave a small scar. A healing cut can get infected, so the health care provider cleaned it carefully. You can help to prevent infection by taking good care of the cut while it heals.
What will happen to the stitches? Stitches need to be removed by a health care provider. How long stitches stay in the skin will depend on the kind of cut and where it is. Sometimes, small white sticky tapes called butterfly bandages are put over the stitches to give them extra strength. These tapes loosen in a few days and fall off on their own.
Why does a cut get a scar? When the deeper layer of the skin is injured, the body uses a protein (collagen) to help fill in the cut area. The filled-in area becomes a scar. A scar will form even if a cut is fixed with stitches. Over time, some scars fade or get smaller.