Guide To The Risk Factors For Keratosis Pilaris

Dry Skin

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Dry skin is one of the leading risk factors for many different skin conditions. One of these major conditions is keratosis pilaris. Dry skin increases a patient's risk of keratosis pilaris because their skin cannot protect itself when it does not have enough moisture. The chances of an individual's skin staying healthy get exponentially worse the longer they have dry skin. Failing to add moisture to the skin will ultimately lead to the red bumps and rough patches associated with keratosis pilaris. Since dryness and keratosis pilaris are often linked, patients can treat both of them simultaneously with the right treatment plan.

Discover additional conditions that increase the risk of keratosis pilaris now.

Ichthyosis

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Ichthyosis is a medical condition that prevents the skin from shedding its dead cells. This causes dry patches of dead skin to grow all over the patient's body. Patients often have skin that resembles fish scales when they are suffering from this condition. Of course, ichthyosis patients are at a significantly higher risk of developing keratosis pilaris than others. Since their body cannot extract dead skin cells, it also has a hard time extracting excess keratin from the hair pores. Thus, the keratin becomes trapped underneath the dry patches of dead skin. Once keratin is stuck in the hair follicles, patients will start to notice the red bumps and other symptoms associated with keratosis pilaris.

Reveal more factors that increase an individual's risk of developing keratosis pilaris now.

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