Traditional Chinese medicine cures keratosis pilaris! 1. Overview: Traditional Chinese medicine believes that the cause of keratosis pilaris is internal heat due to yin deficiency in the body, lack of nourishment of the skin, insufficient congenital endowment, and acquired lack of nourishment, resulting in the skin not being able to receive normal nourishment! 2. Chinese and Western treatments: 1. Traditional Chinese Medicine Treatment: According to the pathology of keratosis pilaris, Dr. Yang uses traditional Chinese medicine that has the functions of “clearing away heat and removing spots, moisturizing the skin, nourishing blood and activating blood circulation” to treat the disease, both internally and externally. The effect is very significant. The drug is rigorously organized and plays a fundamental role. It can enable patients to receive effective and comprehensive treatment in a short period of time, making keratosis pilaris less likely to recur after being cured, and solving the shortcomings of long-term use of ordinary drugs. Most patients can be cured and eradicated within 3-6 months! ! 1) Internal treatment: Prescriptions: Honeysuckle, Salvia, Millet Spatholobus, Astragalus, Atractylodes, Tianzi Pian, Scrophulariaceae, Safflower, Polygonum multiflorum, Black sesame, Insect legs, Lingxian, Rehmannia glutinosa, Asparagus, Ligustrum lucidum. It is composed of seeds, Eclipta, peony bark, red and white peony root, yam, saposhnikovia and other medicines. Function: clear away heat and remove spots, moisturize skin, nourish blood and activate collaterals. Usage: No need to decoct Chinese medicine, take with boiling water, one dose a day. 2) External treatment: Prescriptions: honeysuckle, peony bark, angelica root, white peony root, safflower, saposhnikovia, lithospermum, bletilla striata, simple cold cream and other medicinal materials. Function: nourish blood and activate collaterals, moisturize and relieve itching. Soften horny. Usage: For external use, rub the affected area once a day. The clinical manifestations of keratosis pilaris include skin papules and erythema. The cause of the disease is congenital deficiencies, acquired nutritional deficiencies, yin deficiency and internal heat, blood deficiency and wind-dryness, which lead to the imbalance of nutrition and health in the skin and the disease. This medicine can clear away heat and remove freckles, moisturize the skin, nourish blood, activate blood circulation, and improve microcirculation, so that the patient's papules and erythema disappear in a short period of time, and the skin is smooth and will not relapse. It brings benefits to patients with keratosis pilaris who cannot be cured after long-term treatment or who relapse after recovery. New hope. This therapy has a short course, good effect, and no side effects. The disease is treated regardless of season, gender or child. No matter how long the medical history is or how severe the condition is, most patients can be completely cured with medication in 3-6 months. In order to enable the majority of patients to completely get rid of the troubles of keratosis pilaris. Keratosis pilaris is also called lichen pores or keratosis pilaris. It is a follicular skin disease with keratinized papules and keratotic plugs forming at the mouth of the hair follicles without obvious inflammation. There is a family tendency, which may be autosomal dominant, or may be caused by thyroid dysfunction or vitamin A deficiency. It is common in older children and is more common in those with dry skin. Symptoms are severe in winter and relieved in summer. Clinical manifestations: The rash is a hair follicle papule ranging from the tip of a pin to the size of a rice grain, with an apex. It looks like "chicken skin" and feels rough to the touch. The skin color may be reddish. It is scattered or densely distributed on the outside of the upper arm, the extensor side of the thigh, the forearm, and the shoulder blade. In severe cases, it involves the cheeks and is symmetrically distributed. If you look at it with a magnifying glass, you can see that there are scales on the top of the papule, and there are vellus hairs running through or curling at the mouth of the hair follicle. If the horn plug is peeled off, the top of the papule will be a funnel-shaped pit. The rashes are independent and do not merge, and the skin between the rashes is normal. There is no moisture change during the pathogenesis. The onset is mostly acute or subacute, with subjective symptoms of mild itching or no itching. Keratosis pilaris and vitamin A deficiency both have keratotic papules on the extended sides of the limbs. They have no inflammatory reaction and the surface looks like "chicken skin". However, the keratotic papules of vitamin A deficiency are slightly larger, the skin is dry and rough, and there may be pigmentation, like "toad skin", the hair is sparse and brittle, and it is often accompanied by night blindness, dry eyes, corneal softening or ulcers, etc. There is an obvious history of vitamin A deficiency and no family history. Keratosis pilaris generally does not require treatment. Children with rapid growth and development should eat more vegetables and fruits. Those with obvious keratinization can take vitamin A orally, supplemented by vitamin E to increase the efficacy. 3% to 5% salicylic acid ointment, eczema cream, cod liver oil ointment, etc. can be applied locally.