Hormone-dependent dermatitis is called sebaceous steroid hormone-dependent dermatitis, or glucocorticoid-dependent dermatitis, which is a non-purulent inflammation of the skin caused by the patient’s long-term repeated use of inappropriate or abusive topical sebaceous steroid hormone preparations, causing the affected skin to become dependent on the drug. The main manifestation is that when hormone treatment is stopped after several weeks or months, erythema, papules, tenderness, fissures, pustules, desquamation, pain, itching, burning, tightness, and deterioration of the original disease occur within 1-2 days after the drug is used. From this vicious circle, the more patients use hormones, the higher the dose, the less effective the treatment is and the more side effects. Side effects: such as skin atrophy, rosacea-like dermatitis, acne-like dermatitis, skin laxity, capillary dilation, increased skin sensitivity, enlarged pores, increased and thickened body hair, hormone dependence, etc.