Shaved head ingrown hair
If you shave your head, you may experience ingrown hairs as a result. Once a hair is shaved, its tip becomes sharp. As the hair grows out, it may curve toward the scalp and pierce the skin. Your body then treats the hair like a foreign object and the area becomes red and inflamed. The bump over the ingrown hair may hurt and itch.
Photo Credit Laura Beth Drilling/Demand MediaGrow your hair aside. In the event that you must ensure that it it is quick, utilize barber clippers or scissors to cut it in place of shaving it with a razor. The University of Mississippi medical care advises keeping your short-hair at a length of 1/8 to 1/4 inches.
Photo Credit Laura Beth Drilling/Demand MediaAvoid putting on hats or other things on the head. Perspiration and items rubbing contrary to the ingrown hair bump will irritate it and steer clear of the ingrown tresses from repairing quickly.
Photo Credit Laura Beth Drilling/Demand MediaShampoo your hair day-to-day to get rid of dead skin cells and keep your scalp clean. Even although you don’t have locks, wash your head every day. While you're shampooing, scrub your scalp with a toothbrush or rough washcloth to attempt to tease the ingrown locks out of the skin.
Picture Credit Laura Beth Drilling/Demand MediaPut a hot compress on the scalp for a quarter-hour 3 times daily. Hot compresses helps the bumps to empty.
Photo Credit Laura Beth Drilling/Demand MediaApply hydrocortisone cream towards the bumps two to three times a day. Be sure to rub it in fine so it doesn’t dry on your own hair and leave a white film. The hydrocortisone cream lowers inflammation helping control irritation.
Picture Credit Laura Beth Drilling/Demand MediaForgo the urge to select at ingrown hair, because you can’t easily view it. Hyperpigmentation and scarring might result from trying to seek out a deeply ingrown or embedded hair.
- If the ingrown hairs don’t respond to self-treatment, contact a dermatologist to find out if you'd like medications. Some ingrown hairs may need to be addressed with antibiotics, corticosteroids or retinoids.
- Barber clippers
- Scissors
- Shampoo
- Toothbrush
- Washcloth
- Hot compress