Afro-ethnic hair is different from Caucasian and Asian hair and has unique features.
Ethnic hair is more prone to certain conditions or diseases. Such diseases are not
only related to the fragile inner structure of the hair, but also to the cultural
habits of hairstyles that often exert traction forces upon the pilosebaceous
follicle. Women with African hair subject their hair to chemical treatments such as
hair straightening and relaxing, and thus modify the structure of their hair shaft,
making it more susceptible to damage. For this reason, hair complaints are common
among black women and represent a diagnostic challenge to the dermatologist,
requiring a thorough clinical examination of the hair and scalp, and a detailed
medical history of the patient. The purpose of this review is to warn of the
potential side effects and sequelae related to hairstyles and hair treatments used by
black women, and to highlight the major diseases that affect this ethnicity.
The use of formaldehyde and formaldehyde releasers in hair-straightening formulations started in Rio de Janeiro in 2003. The technique is known as BKT, Brazilian keratin treatment. The aim of this study was to analyze the types of skin reactions presented by patients due to BKT. We describe 7 patients with severe erythema and scurf on the scalp which developed shortly after BKT. The lesions were eczema-like psoriasiform, located mainly on the scalp. Some patients also developed eczema-like lesions and pustules on the face, neck, upper arms, and upper trunk. Dermatoscopic findings included erythema, perifollicular and interfollicular scurf. The peripilar desquamation resembled the outer skin of an onion bulb. Scalp biopsies revealed psoriasiform and spongiotic psoriasiform patterns, one of them similar to anti-TNFα biologic drug psoriasiform alopecia. The possible consequences of the absorption of formaldehyde by hairdressers or clients are still to be verified by the scientific community; however, the skin and scalp reactions observed in our cases suggest a drug reaction phenomenon and not only eczemas of irritant or allergic origin.
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