Seborrheic Dermatitis (SD)
Basics
- Chronic, superficial, recurrent inflammatory skin disease.
- Predominantly affects sebum-rich, hairy regions: scalp, eyebrows, face; less commonly chest and back.
- Infants commonly present with cradle cap.
- Occurs mostly in adolescence, infancy, and adulthood.
- Male predominance.
Epidemiology
- Global prevalence: 2-5%, up to 83% in HIV-positive/immunosuppressed.
- Infantile SD common in first 3 months across ethnicities.
Etiology and Pathophysiology
- Malassezia yeast colonization implicated.
- Genetic and environmental triggers; flares with stress/illness.
- Increased sebaceous activity during infancy/adolescence or with acnegenic drugs.
- Immunosuppression increases incidence; immune mechanisms suspected but not well-defined.
- Positive family history common; no specific genetic markers identified.
Risk Factors
- Immunosuppression (HIV/AIDS).
- Parkinson disease, neurologic disorders, facial paralysis.
- Emotional stress.
- Obesity, oily skin, acne.
- Down syndrome.
- Medications: buspirone, chlorpromazine, cimetidine, ethionamide, griseofulvin, haloperidol, interferon-Ξ±, methyldopa, psoralen, IL-2.
General Prevention
- Frequent washing of seborrheic skin to soften scales.
Commonly Associated Conditions
- Parkinson disease.
- HIV/AIDS.
- Facial paralysis.
- Down syndrome.
Diagnosis
History
- Intermittent phases with burning, scaling, itching.
- Worse in winter/early spring; remits in summer.
- Infantile "cradle cap": greasy scalp scaling, possible erythema.
- Adults: red, greasy, scaling macules/plaques with indistinct margins.
- Minimal pruritus.
- Bilateral symmetric involvement of scalp, eyebrows, eyelids, nasolabial folds, ears, retroauricular folds, chest, back, genital and axillary areas.
Physical Exam
- Scalp: mild patchy scaling to thick adherent crusts; plaques rare.
- Lesions: brawny/yellow greasy scaling over red inflamed skin.
- Hypopigmentation in darker skin tones.
- Secondary infection presents with oozing/crusting.
- Seborrheic blepharitis may occur.
Differential Diagnosis
- Atopic dermatitis (harder to differentiate in infants).
- Psoriasis: sharply demarcated plaques, nail involvement.
- Candida infections.
- Tinea (cruris/capitis).
- Eczema of auricle/otitis externa.
- Rosacea.
- Discoid lupus erythematosus.
- Histiocytosis X.
- Dandruff (noninflammatory scalp only).
- Drug eruption.
Diagnostic Tests
- Skin biopsy if unclear or treatment failure.
- Fungal cultures if refractory, pustules, or alopecia.
- Histopathology: hyperkeratosis, acanthosis, spongiosis, parakeratosis around follicles, mild lymphocytic inflammation.
Treatment
General Measures
- Increase shampoo frequency.
- Moderate sunlight exposure may help.
- Infantile: mild nonmedicated shampoos; mineral oil to remove thick scales.
- Adults: antiseborrheic shampoos (selenium sulfide, coal tar, sulfur, salicylic acid).
- For dense scaling: coal tar detergents (e.g., 10% liquor carbonis detergens) overnight under shower cap.
Medications
- First Line:
- Antifungal shampoos: ketoconazole 2%, miconazole 2%, ciclopirox 1% twice weekly.
- Topical corticosteroids: hydrocortisone 1%, advance to fluorinated steroids short-term.
- Topical antifungal creams: ketoconazole 2%, sertaconazole 2%.
- Coal tar, selenium sulfide, zinc pyrithione shampoos twice weekly.
-
Lithium gluconate/succinate ointment/gel 8% twice weekly.
-
Precautions:
- Avoid long-term potent steroids to prevent atrophy, hypopigmentation, systemic absorption.
-
Fluorinated steroids risky around eyes.
-
Second Line:
- Calcineurin inhibitors (pimecrolimus 1% cream, tacrolimus 0.1% ointment).
-
Systemic antifungals for severe/recalcitrant cases (terbinafine, itraconazole).
-
Other Agents:
- Low-molecular-weight hyaluronic acid gel for skin hydration.
Issues for Referral
- Poor response to treatment.
- Suspected systemic illness (HIV).
Complementary & Alternative Medicine
- Honey, aloe vera, borage oil, tea tree oil, quassia amara extract show antifungal/anti-inflammatory effects.
Ongoing Care
- Hair care varies by hair type; apply treatments directly to scalp to minimize hair damage.
Follow-Up Recommendations
- Monitor every 2β12 weeks based on severity and response.
Patient Education
- Refer to reliable sources like familydoctor.org for disease information.
Prognosis
- Infantile SD usually resolves by 6β8 months.
- Adult SD is chronic with remissions and exacerbations.
- Erythema and hypopigmentation resolve with treatment.
Complications
- Skin atrophy, striae from steroids.
- Glaucoma/cataracts from periocular steroids.
- Rare herpes keratitis; stop eyelid steroids if herpes simplex occurs.
ICD10 Codes:
- L21.9 Seborrheic dermatitis, unspecified
- L21.1 Seborrheic infantile dermatitis
- L21.0 Seborrhea capitis
Clinical Pearls:
- Consider systemic disease in refractory SD.
- Infantile SD is self-limited.
- Adult SD usually manageable with shampoos and topical steroids.
- Avoid prolonged potent steroid use, especially on face and folds.