1 / 10

Children Health Issues: Eczema

Children Health Issues: Eczema. Victoria Brunson January 29,2010. What is Eczema?. According to Health, Safety, and Nutrition for the Young Child, eczema is a chronic inflammatory skin condition. According to emedicinehealth , eczema is also known as dermatitis. Different degrees of Eczema.

cyma
Télécharger la présentation

Children Health Issues: Eczema

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Children Health Issues: Eczema Victoria Brunson January 29,2010

  2. What is Eczema? • According to Health, Safety, and Nutrition for the Young Child, eczema is a chronic inflammatory skin condition. • According to emedicinehealth, eczema is also known as dermatitis.

  3. Different degrees of Eczema

  4. Signs • The exact cause of eczema is unknown until this day. • Caused by an abnormal immune system response and associated with allergies • Triggers: soaps, detergents, weather (hot, cold, humid, or dry), environmental allergens, jewelry, creams, food handling, clothing, sweating, gloves, rubbing, bacteria, emotional or mental stress

  5. Symptoms • Intense itching • Rash; patchy/flaky or scaly dry skin • Rash burns • If scratched, oozes and becomes crusty • Painful cracks • Reddened patches of irritated skin

  6. Hands-on look of Eczema

  7. Management • Eczema is not curable but can be controlled. Eliminating environmental allergens can be a step taken to reduce exposure. Letting children to know not to scratch skin and to keep skin moisturized, especially after bathing. • Keep in warm weather, dress in light and loose fitting clothing and also reducing stress in the lives and help them develop a healthy self-image

  8. Treatment • Prescription-strength steroid cream and antihistamine medication are the usual treatments. • Diet restrictions and chemical skin-drying agents may also be offered, but their success is controversial. • For severe cases not responding to high-potency steroid cream, alternate treatments may be tried. These include coal tar, PUVA (psoralen + ultraviolet A light), and chemotherapy agents.

  9. Treatment • Antihistamines - Prescription strength antihistamines relieve symptoms without drowsiness, allowing you to carry on with your normal activities. • Corticosteroids - A short course of an oral steroid is sometimes given if the rash is severe. A long course is rarely prescribed because of the many side effects. • Antibiotic pills or an antifungal cream may be prescribed if your health care provider is concerned about infection.

  10. Work Cited • http://www.emedicinehealth.com/eczema/page8_em.htm

More Related