Chicken skin, also known as perifollicular keratosis, is not related to mites.
Perifollicular keratosis is a chronic follicular keratotic skin disease associated with autosomal dominant inheritance, vitamin A deficiency, and metabolic disorders, and manifests itself as follicular papules the size of a pinprick to a grain of corn, usually with no signs of pain or itching. The lesions are severe in winter and mild in summer, but usually do not resolve completely.
Skin diseases associated with mites include mite dermatitis, rosacea, and scabies, etc. There is no conclusive evidence that perifollicular keratosis is associated with mites.
This disease generally does not require special treatment, if you feel self-conscious about the impact on aesthetics, you can go to the hospital, under the guidance of the doctor reasonable use of medication, and daily attention should be paid to skin moisturizing.