Keratosis Pilaris

Keratinisation Disorder ICD: L11.0

Also known as: KP, Chicken Skin, Follicular Keratosis

Description

Keratosis pilaris is a very common benign condition caused by excess keratin plugging hair follicles. It presents as rough, skin-coloured or erythematous papules, typically on the upper arms, thighs, cheeks, and buttocks. It affects up to 40% of adults and is more prevalent in those with atopic tendencies. While harmless, it is a frequent cosmetic concern.

Symptoms

  • Small rough papules ("goosebump" texture)
  • Skin-coloured, red, or brown bumps
  • Upper arms, thighs, cheeks, buttocks — typical distribution
  • Dry or rough skin texture
  • Mild pruritus (occasional)
  • Worsens in dry/cold weather

Causes & Triggers

  • Excess keratin production plugging follicular ostia
  • Associated with atopic dermatitis and ichthyosis vulgaris
  • Genetic predisposition (autosomal dominant, variable penetrance)
  • Exacerbated by low humidity and dry skin

Severity Classification

Mild Scattered papules, barely noticeable, minimal roughness
Moderate Widespread papules with erythema, rough texture, cosmetic concern
Severe Extensive involvement with significant keratotic plugging and inflammation

Treatment Ladder

  1. 1 Foundational: Regular emollient use to reduce dryness
  2. 2 Mild: Keratolytic moisturisers (urea 10%, lactic acid, salicylic acid)
  3. 3 Moderate: Topical retinoids (tretinoin, adapalene) for follicular normalisation
  4. 4 Moderate: Glycolic acid or lactic acid chemical exfoliation
  5. 5 Refractory erythema: Pulsed dye laser for redness

Relevant Compounds

Recommended Drugs

Suggested Cosmetics

Lifestyle Tips

  • Apply keratolytic moisturisers consistently — results take 4–8 weeks
  • Avoid scrubbing or picking at bumps (worsens inflammation)
  • Use lukewarm water — hot showers strip skin oils
  • Exfoliate gently with a washcloth, not abrasive scrubs
  • KP often improves with age and in humid climates
  • Set realistic expectations — managed, not cured

When to Refer

  • Extensive or atypical presentation needing differential diagnosis
  • Significant associated erythema suitable for laser therapy
  • Suspected ichthyosis or other keratinisation disorder