What is Prickly Heat Rash?
July 30th, 2009 Filed Under Baby Potty Training, Diapers, Potty Training Boys, Potty Training Tips, When to Potty Train, toddler potty training
Prickly heat starts when the narrow ducts that carry sweat to the skin’s surface get stopped up. The trapped sweat causes inflammation, which produces a rash which includes itching and a cluster of very tiny blisters. Prickly heat also can appear as large, reddened areas of skin. Prickly heat often occurs during warmer months.
You can prevent and stop prickly heat rash when you read more about how you can stop excessive sweating forever.
When the sweat is blocked from the skin’s surface, it cannot escape causing blood toxins in that location to increase. This reason the pores get clogged is due to dead skin cells or bacteria such as Staphylococcus epidermidis, a common bacterium that occurs on the skin which is associated with acne. How this occurs in not widely knows but what is known is that it always seems to happen during prolonged periods of sweating. This can be environmental (hot weather, high humidity) and/or physiological (exertion, workouts, working outdoors).
It is also known as heat rash, heat rashes or sweat rashes. In medical terminology, prickly heat is known as malaria rubra or simply malaria.
Prickly heat comes about in persons of all ages, but it is seen much more often in children and infants. This is because their sweat glands are not fully developed. Also, this situation is seen much more often in the areas of tropical temperatures and where humidity levels are high.
The usual symptoms of prickly heat is small bumps on the skin which are usually grainy in nature. They could be red or they could even be just a shade darker than the color of the person’s skin. These eruptions always itch and are also accompanied by a prickly burning ’pins-and-needles’ sensation.
These outbreaks may simultaneously occur in a number of areas on the sufferer’s body. The most common locations are the face, neck, under the breasts, and around the scrotum. Other areas less frequently affected are skin folds, areas of the body that rub against other skin or clothing such as the chest, back and stomach, etc. A related and sometimes simultaneous condition is folliculitis. This occurs when hair follicles become plugged with foreign matter, resulting in inflammation much like what occurs in prickly heat rash.
For children, prickly heat is always very discomforting due to the associated pain and itching that accompanies the rash. Additionally, there is always a chance of a severe infection once the prickly heat has cropped up.
Also See Home Treatments and How to Prevent Prickly Heat Rash
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Baby Eczema Treatments
June 15th, 2009 Filed Under Baby Potty Training, Diapers, Potty Training Boys, Potty Training Tips, When to Potty Train, toddler potty training
Baby Eczema Treatments
Unfortunately it is a very common skin problem in babies. It can be unsettling for parents who have little ones with this condition, but all is not lost as finding baby eczema treatments is actually quite easy.
There is relief for mothers who think there no baby eczema treatments that can be used on their tiny bundle of joy. The fears with using baby eczema treatments could very well be that the baby will usually suck on their hands and fingers regularly, especially if they are teething. The fear is that the ingredients may have a negative effect on their digestive tracks.
The Best Method is Often Prevention
The bay eczema could be due to several things including the milk formula, toiletries and cleaning detergents for their clothing.
Preventative baby eczema treatments include some of the following:
1. You may need to consider changing your milk formula to a soy based formula.
2. Clothing needs to be washed separately with a very mild natural soap if possible. Don’t add any harsh products to the washing water, but if you do, rinse thoroughly several times, and try not to use other softeners which may also cause additional irritations.
3. When considering baby eczema treatments, keep babies skin adequately moisturized. Make sure it is not scented and that it is a nice and thick lotion. Eucerin and Aquaphor are good options, but any baby lotion which is thick and mild will help.
4. Avoid bathing baby everyday. Bathing 2-3 times a week should be adequate. Use as little soap as possible and make sure it is a very mild soap. Pat the skin dry when you are done.
Always remember baby’s skin is extra sensitive due to the eczema so you do not want to do anything to irritate the condition even more. Try putting mittens or socks over you baby’s hands and feet to help with your baby eczema treatment and to try to prevent them from scratching the areas. If this does not work and babies skin does become infected and very red, visit your doctor and he will prescribe a mild steroid to reduce the inflammation.
There are other baby eczema treatments available to you. Prevent the skin from becoming irritated by keeping you baby cool with light clothing over dry skin. Avoid certain foods which could cause flare up in your baby’s eczema when considering other baby eczema treatments.An allergy test may be helpful if you are unsure which foods to avoid. These are just a few examples of baby eczema treatments. Most babies grow out of the condition around the age of five or six years with no lasting effects, which is great news.
Find baby eczema products and more treatment ideas at SkinConditionEczema.com
Author: M.A. Steeden
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Baby eczema
June 2nd, 2009 Filed Under Baby Potty Training, Diapers, Potty Training Boys, Potty Training Tips, When to Potty Train, toddler potty training
Co-author: Body Moisturizing. The smooth and soft baby skin is often affected by very bothersome health conditions such as eczema.
Twenty percent of infants nowadays end up affected by atopic eczema which is a rash located on various parts of their body as a consequence of the immune system response to an allergic trigger. It may have a scaly or flaky aspect, it may be rash-like red and look dry.
Mild forms of eczema on babies have simple treatment forms: constant moisturizing of the affected skin areas and the use of high quality cleansers.
Why is it that this condition appears so much in infant cases? Well, one explanation is that eczema on babies is tough to combat by a developing organism and skin.Moreover, the epidermal barrier is not completely developed as it is the case with adults for instance, not to mention that scratching deteriorates the condition even further. The adult skin consists of several layers that allow the preservation of moisture within the tissues and since infants’ skin is much more sensitive than ours, there are higher chances that eczema on babies is more often than in adults. In addition, preventing it from turning worse is more difficult with infants as communication is impossible at such a young age and scratching will be carried out unconsciously.
Other complementary reasons why eczema on babies proves so common, is that their skin may become irritated from substances we consider to be quite naturally used in our lives. Babies may develop a condition from clothing or sheets washed with fabric softeners, not to mention that negative reactions can be attributed to heat, sweat or to the skin contact with rough materials such as wool.
Excess of no matter what substance could determine an allergic response and the formation of a rash.
In case one of the parents has suffered from this condition, chances are higher that eczema on babies will become manifest too. And, since parents know how to handle the situation from experience, they should do their best to ease or prevent the infant’s problem. It is important that mothers keep an eye open for signs that may point to this condition and try to remove the factors to blame for this problem.
It is pretty unpleasant to wake up one morning and find that your baby suffers from this condition and see the poor little one unable to deal with it. Contact the doctor right away, start investigations and try to figure out how to address the problem. Moreover, it would be great even for the parents to do a bit of research on eczema on babies themselves.
More at: Body Moisturizer, Pankrella Christina.
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Baby eczema
May 26th, 2009 Filed Under Baby Potty Training, Diapers, Potty Training Boys, Potty Training Tips, When to Potty Train, toddler potty training
Co-authored by: Acid Chemical Peel. Many parents worry about baby eczema. This dermatological problem affects the skin on the neck, the face, the upper chest and the scalp during the first months of life.
Later on it may appear on the shins and forearms as well. There are a number of facts regarding baby eczema that parents should be aware of. Watch out for blisters that could break or leak and for extensive skin dryness. In the worst of cases baby eczema could extend to the entire body skin. Normally, the diaper area, the nose and mouth parts remain unaffected by the condition. If the areas of skin on the forearms and shins are thickened between the ages of twelve and eighteen months, parents should not be worried since this happens due to babies’ crawling a lot.
Eczema or dermatitis, with baby eczema included, are terms used to describe some skin conditions recognized by symptoms such as very itchy and dry skin, reddening, swelling, cracking or scaling of the skin. Though eczema can occur almost anywhere on the body, the scalp, the chest, the forehead and the joints are the predisposed areas for the development of baby eczema. In very severe cases, baby eczema can be so annoying by the itchiness that it will cause discomfort during sleep and keep the baby awake and crying. Lots of babies get the condition known atopic eczema which is usually hereditary. This condition tends to occur and develop somewhere around the age of two or three months. Atopic eczema represents an oversensitivity of the immune system that involves reactions to the allergic reactions to the environment in conditions normal for other people.
Whether babies develop eczema because other members of the family suffer from atopic conditions such as asthma, hay fever or eczema it is still not very clear and certain. Another situation for babies to develop baby eczema may be prolonged exposure to a specific allergen.
Regarding the treatment of baby eczema it must be pointed out that there is no specific catch-all treatment, unluckily, since it is an allergic condition. Fortunately several treatments and remedies have been developed and so far they’ve been really good at alleviating eczema symptoms. These remedies for baby eczema include moisturizing, careful bath times, avoiding detergents, using cotton clothes, being careful about the babies’ diets, and keeping pets away. Besides, make sure your baby’s environment is dust free, as well as minimize scratching through cutting the baby’s nails short.
With Help Of: Skin Care, Pankrella Christina.
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Potty Training Boys: Hell on Earth?
November 2nd, 2008 Filed Under Potty Training Boys
Many parents believe potty training boys is harder than potty training girls. They base this belief on two ideas. The first is that boys mature physically and mentally later than girls do. The second is that biologically and thanks to their penis, boys feel little discomfort when they wet themselves. Other parents disagree, however. They think that potty training boys and potty training girls are equal in that both are difficult. Experts share this idea, too. According to doctors and child-rearing experts, it’s the strategy – not the gender – that means the difference between potty training success and failure.
If you’re a parent with male toddlers to potty train, you need all the help you can get. Who better to turn to for advice than Dr. Wayne Jensen? He created ‘Potty Trained in 1 to 3 Days’ as a guide for parents to wean their kids off diapers early. The guide is available in audio format so you can download it to your computer or iPod and listen to it while you go about your chores. The guide walks you through the process of potty training boys and girls and is the product of years of research and first-hand experience.
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