1 / 42

Pediatric Skin Disorders

Pediatric Skin Disorders. Compare skin differences. Infant: skin not mature at birth Adolescence: sebaceous glands become enlarged & active. Skin Assessment. Assess history Assess exposure Assess character Assess sensation. Dermatitis. Dermatitis.

kuniko
Télécharger la présentation

Pediatric Skin Disorders

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. Pediatric Skin Disorders

  2. Compare skin differences • Infant: skin not mature at birth • Adolescence: sebaceous glands become enlarged & active.

  3. Skin Assessment • Assess history • Assess exposure • Assess character • Assess sensation

  4. Dermatitis

  5. Dermatitis • Inflammation of the skin that occurs in response to contact with an allergen or irritant; also referred to as “contact dermatitis”

  6. Dermatitis • Common irritants: Soap, fabric softeners, lotions, urine and stool ♦ Common allergens poison ivy, poison oak lanolin, latex, rubber nickel, fragrances

  7. Dermatitis: signs and symptoms • Erythema • Edema • Pruritus • Vesicles or bullae that rupture, ooze and crust

  8. Dermatitis: Treatment • Medications • Application of a corticosteroid topical agent: remind pt to continue use for 2-3 wks after signs of healing • Application of protective barrier ointments Oatmeal baths, cool compresses Antihistamines given for sedative effect

  9. Eczema • Chronic superficial skin disorder characterized by intense pruritis

  10. Erythematous patches with vesicles Pruritis Exudate and crusts Drying and scaling Lichenification (thickening of the skin) Eczema: signs and symptoms

  11. Eczema, cont.

  12. Goal of Treatment • Hydrate the skin

  13. Treatment of Eczema • Emollients (creams which lubricate the skin) • Oral antihistamines (control itching) • Antibiotics (treat superinfections) • Corticosteroids (anti-inflammatories) • Immunomodulators (inhibit T lymphocyte activation) • AVOID SOAPS!

  14. Acne

  15. Acne • Inflammatory disease of the skin involving the sebaceous glands and hair follicles. • Contributing factors include: heredity, hormonal influences and emotional stress

  16. Acne: Three main types • Follicular plugs • Pustular papules • Cystic nodules

  17. Patient teaching • Do not pick! This increases the bacterial count on the surface of the skin and opens lesions to infection which worsens scarring • Remind patients that the treatment will not show improvement until about 4-6 weeks but they must consistently follow the regime set up by the physician

  18. Medical treatment for acne • Topical (Benzoyl peroxide, Tretinoin (RetinA), topical preferred to systemic; however, both may be needed • Oral: Tetracycline, minocycline, erythromycin; estrogen for female pts., Accutane

  19. Acne: Nursing care • Avoid picking and squeezing • Use gentle skin cleansers • Avoid use of astringents containing ETOH • Avoid hats or abrasive rubbing of the skin • Wash hands after handling greasy foods • Limit use of petrolatum-based hair products; hair away from face • Use oil-free makeup, protections from windy, cold weather • Continue therapy even when improved

  20. Impetigo http://www.emedicine.com/emerg/topic283.htm Impetigo became infected • Hemolytic Strep infection of the skin • Incubation period is 2-5 days after contact

  21. Begins as a reddish macular rash, commonly seen on face/extremities • Progresses to papular and vesicular rash that oozes and forms a moist, honey colored crust. Pruritis of skin • Common in 2-5 year age group

  22. Therapeutic Management • Apply moist soaks of Burrow’s solution • Antibiotic therapy: Keflex for 10 days • Patient education

  23. Therapeutic Interventions for impetigo • Goal: prevent scarring and promote + self image. • Individualize treatment to gender, age, and severity of infection • Takes 4-6 wks to improve • What is the major nursing implication here?

  24. Candiditis- Thrush Overgrowth of Candida albicans Acquired through delivery

  25. Thrush • Characterized by white patches in the mouth, gums, or tongue • Treated with oral Nystatin suspension: swish and swallow

  26. Dermatophytosis (Ringworm) • Tinea Capitis fungal infection known as “ringworm” • Transmission: • Person-to-person • Animal-to-person

  27. S&S: • Scaly, circumscribed patches to patchy, gray scaling areas of alopecia. • Pruritic • Generally asymptomatic, but severe, deep inflammatory reaction may appear as boggy, encrusted lesions (kerions)

  28. http://www.ecureme.com/quicksearch_reference.asp

  29. Clinical manifestations • Fungal infection of the stratum corneum, nails and hair (the base of hair shaft causing hair to break off…rarely permanent) • Scaly, patches • Pruritis • Generally asymptomatic, but severe reactions may appear as encrusted lesions

  30. Tinea: signs and symptoms

  31. Therapeutic Interventions • Transmitted by clothing, bedding, combs and animals (cats especially) • May take 1-3 months to heal completely, even with treatment • Child doesn’t return to school until lesions dry

  32. Diagnosis • Potassium hydroxide examination • Black Light

  33. Medication Therapy • Antifungals: • Oral griseofulvin (Lamisil) • Give with fatty foods to aid in absorption • Treatment is 4-6 wks • Can return to daycare when lesions are dry

  34. Pediculosis Capitis (lice) • http://www.emedicine.com/emerg/topic409.htm • a parasitic skin disorder caused by lice • the lice lay eggs which look like white flecks, attached firmly to base of the hair shaft, causing intense pruritus

  35. Diagnosis • Direct identification of egg (nits) • Direct identification of live insects

  36. Pediculosis

  37. Medication Therapy • Treatment: shampoos RID, NIX, Kwell(or Lindane) shampoo: is applied to wet hair to form a lather and rubbed in for at least amount of time recommended, followed by combing with a fine-tooth comb to remove any remaining nits.

  38. Scabies http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/scabies.html Sarcoptes scabei mite.  Females are 0.3 to 0.4 mm long and 0.25 to 0.35 mm wide.  Males are slightly more than half that size. • A parasitic skin disorder (stratum corneum- not living tissue) caused by a female mite. • The mite burrows into the skin depositing eggs and fecal material; between fingers, toes, palms, axillae • pruritic & grayish-brown, thread-like lesion

  39. http://www.aad.org/pamphlets_spanish/sarna.html Scabies between thumb and index finger On foot

  40. Therapeutic Interventions • transmitted by clothing, towels, close contact • Diagnosis confirmed by demonstration from skin scrapings. • treatment: application of scabicide cream which is left on for a specific number of hours (4 to 14)to kill mite • rash and itch will continue until stratum corneum is replaced (2-3 weeks)

  41. Care: • Fresh laundered linen and underclothing should be used. • Contacts should be reduced until treatment is completed.

More Related