Thursday, December 4, 2008

General Information and Reviews on Baby Acne Eczema

By Louis Soul

When looking at baby eczema, whilst medicine now knows that a person's immune system is involved, what causes eczema remains a mystery. Typically, contact with some external allergen triggers an allergic reaction, leading to the typical skin symptoms and changes seen in sufferers. Baby eczema is a rash seen on their face which gradually gets worse unless treated, eventually becoming causing cracking and flaking. In the USA, it can affect anything between 10 and 20 percent of infants.

Strangely, this condition is short lived and in most cases it seems to cure itself before the child reaches the age of two. Unfortunately in a few children do not get over this problem and continue to suffer with it when they are adults. Although this skin disorder can affect someone at any stage in their life, it is most prevalent in infants. As many as a third of all sufferers developed the condition before they were twelve months old; however, almost all contracted it before they were five.

Atopic eczema is the type most often found in baby eczema, where the child suffers with an itchy rash that is more often located on the arms, legs, face and head. This type, atopic eczema, tends to run in families and is often triggered when the baby's skin isn't moisturized correctly. Often the trigger mechanism is either the detergent or fabric conditioner used to wash the baby's clothes and this can also be the trigger for the condition in adults as well. Other studies carried out on baby eczema have linked early weaning to be a causal effect.

Other medical conditions, such as respiratory infections, may also act as triggers. Studies have also shown that it may be more common in those infants who suffer from allergic rhinitis or food allergies, or whose mothers suffer from asthma. In fact almost a third of all childhood cases are thought to be as a result of a food allergy; once the foodstuff causing the problem is discovered, it is just a simple matter of taking out of the child's meals. Unfortunately, the process of eliminating foods is usually one of trial and error; some commonly implicated foods are:

* Sea-Food
* Dairy products, especially milk
* Wheat
* Food prepared using eggs
* Meals or foodstuffs where peanuts have been used in the preparation

The treatment with babies involves bathing in lukewarm water, and proper skin lubrication with hypoallergenic creams. To ensure they are comfortable they only dressed in natural cotton clothing once they have been bathed. A baby with this condition can easily cause infection to damaged skin if their nails are not kept short because they will undoubtedly scratch themselves constantly. For infants with more serious baby eczema, antihistamine cream may be prescribed which should help stop the itching; steroid creams can also be used for a short period to help heal the skin. This is a difficult medical condition to not only control but overcome despite being a common complaint.

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