dyshidrotic eczema

atopic eczema

dyshidrotic eczema

What is Actually Dyshidrotic Eczema?

dyshidrotic eczema

dyshidrotic eczema

Dyshidrotic eczema is a skin disease on the fingers that cause heartburn and itching. Bacteria or allergies can cause this disease. These germs are usually spread through water.

Dyshidrotic eczema also causes problems if not dealt with promptly. Especially, if it occurs to the children, when the children exposed to dyshidrotic eczema and itch, with no conscious, he would scratch his skin and it will cause injury. If it left the water in the spots had been able to spread to the skin surface in other parts.

Another complaint of dyshidrotic eczema is hot like a burning feeling on the skin. This is very disturbing. Moreover, if the temperature of the hot room, it will make your body moist and sweaty.

Such conditions will make it easier dyshidrotic eczema spread to the entire surface of the skin. Because germs like be in a moist skin. Handling the first to deal with this dyshidrotic eczema is to give powder containing an itch reliever. After that do the cleaning surface of the skin and then spread with a sulfur-containing drugs. However, if dyshidrotic eczema is severe, it can be seen from the fingernails to thicken and change color to black.

dyshidrotic eczema to cure this, you have to go to a specialist in skin diseases. You have to do to obtain drugs and treatment in accordance with your disease condition. Follow your doctor’s advice and treat immediately.

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November 15, 2009  Tags: , , ,   Posted in: Eczema

2 Responses

  1. Kelli - January 4, 2010

    You should consider revising your post on dyshidrotic eczema. It is not contagious! This form of eczema tends to occur on the hands and feet and, more specifically, cannot “spread throughout the body”. Health misinformation could cause more harm than good; so I would suggest getting facts from reliable sources that are peer-reviewed. For your information, sites like Wikipedia or Yahoo should not be deemed a sufficient source.

  2. admin - January 17, 2010

    ok thanks

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