What’s wrong with the bumps on either side of your temples?

Bumps on both sides of the temples may be due to diseases such as acne, folliculitis, and keratosis pilaris.
1. Acne: a common chronic inflammatory disease of the sebaceous glands of the hair follicles, may be related to heredity, excessive secretion of sebaceous glands, hyperkeratosis of sebaceous gland openings, and proliferation of Propionibacterium acnes. It occurs in adolescents and is commonly found on the face, manifested by pimples, papules, pustules, nodules, and other symptoms, and is often accompanied by pore enlargement and sebum overflow.
2. Folliculitis: mainly due to bacterial, fungal and other pathogenic infections caused by hair follicles and their surrounding tissues inflammatory diseases, commonly found in the face, neck, thighs and other parts of the body, can occur on both sides of the sideburns, the performance of the follicle as the center of the inflammatory pimples, pustules, accompanied by pain, itching, and other symptoms, and may even pus, ulceration and necrosis.
3. perifollicular keratosis: the disease may be related to heredity, vitamin A deficiency, endocrine factors, is a chronic follicular keratosis pilaris, manifested as follicular keratin plugs or keratinized papules consistent with the pores, chicken skin-like appearance is generally no obvious self-conscious symptoms, can be in the temples on both sides of the phenomenon of long pimples.
Sideburns long pimples may also be caused by other diseases, it is recommended that patients seek medical attention in a timely manner, after a clear diagnosis under the guidance of the doctor symptomatic treatment.