When skin is injured, fibrous tissue called scar tissue forms over the wound to repair and protect the injury. In some cases, the scar tissue continues to grow over time and becomes larger than the original wound itself , forming smooth, hard, flesh-colored, pink, or red growths called keloids.They’re most commonly found on the chest, shoulders, earlobes, and cheeks. However, keloids can affect any part of the body and and tend to enlarge progressively. They can be often itchy, hypersensitive and painful.
Some types of hair loss are temporary, and others are permanent. It can be the result of heredity, hormonal changes, medical conditions, infections, nutritional deficiency, stress, medications, inflammatory skin diseases, congenital or acquired hair shaft disorders, certain hairstyles and treatments.
Topical therapy
Compression bandages
Intralesional injections
Cryotherapy
Surgical excision