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THE MERCK MANUAL MEDICAL LIBRARY: The Merck Manual of Medical Information--Home Edition
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Ingrown Beard Hairs(Pseudofolliculitis Barbae)

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Pseudofolliculitis barbae (ingrown beard hairs) is inflammation caused by hairs that curl so that the tips puncture the skin.

This hair disorder most often occurs with the curly hairs of the beard, especially in black men. Each ingrown hair results in a tiny, mildly painful pimple with a barely visible hair curling into the center.

Doctors diagnose the condition by its typical appearance.

Treatment involves teasing the tips of any ingrown hairs out of the skin with the point of a needle or sharp scalpel. If there is much inflammation, doctors sometimes give hydrocortisone Some Trade Names
See Cortisol
or antibiotic cream.

The best preventive treatment is to stop shaving and grow the beard. When the hairs are longer, they do not curl back and puncture the skin.

A man who does not want a beard can use a depilatory (a liquid or cream preparation that removes unwanted hair), although it often irritates the skin. Also, hair can be permanently removed with electrolysis or with laser treatment (see Noncancerous Skin Growths: Growths and Malformations of the Vessels). People who must shave should wet the beard first and should shave in the same direction in which the hair grows. People should avoid shaving closely with multiple razor strokes. Applying eflornithine Some Trade Names
VANIQA
cream may help by slowing hair growth.

Last full review/revision August 2008 by Wendy S. Levinbook, MD

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