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Category Archives: Eczema
My Eczema Was Under ControlUntil I Got Pregnant – Health.com
Posted: July 10, 2017 at 7:46 pm
People say that pregnancy is supposed to be a happy time. Well, Im pretty sure those people don'thave eczema. For mea woman with a severe case of the skin condition, which causes itchy, red rashes on the skinthose nine months were the most miserable days of my life.
Up until I got pregnant at age 17, my eczema was manageable. I was diagnosed when I was four years old, and used the same topical steroid for years. Whenever I had a flare, I put on the cream and my skin would calm down. When I was eight, I moved to Tampa, Florida, and, despite the occasional rash, I still wore shorts and tank tops. Besides, the air felt good on my skin. But by the time I entered middle school, things started to get worse. The patches were spreadingto my wrists, the back of my legs, and eventually to my face. Then I got pregnant, and my skin just went crazy.
RELATED: 5 Things You Should Never Say to Someone With Eczema
I was two months pregnant when the left side of my face started to itch uncontrollably. I felt it before I went to bed one night, and by the next morning, my skin was so inflamed that my mom had to take me to the hospital. As the weeks went on, my skin got worse: I scratched the sores on my head so much so that my hair was falling out in patches, and my legs were raw from clawing at the skin.
As my due date neared, my mom took me to the hospital because she suspected that something was seriously wrong with me. Walking was too painful, and my legs were oozing so much that I had to keep them wrappedin bed sheets. When I was wheeled into the hospital on a chair, the doctors looked at me and basically shrugged. They didnt want to admit me because they didnt think there wasnt anything wrong. Luckily, my mom stood her ground, and someone took my blood pressure. Thats when I found out that I had preeclampsia, or very high blood pressure (which can lead to premature birth).
While monitoring my blood pressure, the doctors took culture swabs of my legs. Two days later, the results came back: MRSA, a serious, sometimes life-threatening infection caused by a type of Staph bacteria. Before I knew it, I was being whisked away to a room at the end of the hallan isolation room, where they told me I was going to be quarantined.
When my mom arrived back at the hospital, the doctors told her that shed need to wear a gown and gloves if she wanted to see me. She refused. She said, I lived with her while she had this infection. Im not talking to my daughter like that.
Two days after that, I was induced. The doctors moved me to a delivery room and gave me an epidural. I was only in labor for about threehours before giving birth: a healthy baby boy who weighed about 6.8 pounds. Hes ten years old nowand thankfully, he doesn'thave eczema.
RELATED: The Best Lotions for Eczema, According to Dermatologists
I was discharged a day and a half later, but I was still in a lot of pain, especially in my legs. Everything hurt. It even hurt to wash my sons bottle. I eventually had to go to a different hospital to get a prednisone shot. That was the first time in two months that my legs stopped hurting.
It wasanother three years before I found a good dermatologist. He did everything he could for me, even saw me on days when he had a full schedule. Now,I dont itch as much, and Im not in so much pain. My skin is regaining some of its color, and my eyebrows and eyelashes are starting to grow back; in the past, Id rubbed them off. For the first time in years, I feel as if Ive finally found help.
Jillian M., 27, from Tampa, Florida, as told to Maria Masters
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Clomid baby aspirin – How long does it take for clomid to start working – Van Wert independent
Posted: at 7:45 pm
VW independent/submitted information
DELPHOS A Delphos couple were injured in a home invasion assault that occurred Saturday morning.
David and Dianna Allemeier of 209 S. Pierce St. in Delphos were both taken to St. Ritas Medical Center in Lima for treatment of injuries received when a man gained entry to their home and reportedly assaulted them.
Delphos Police were first called out at 6:05 a.m. Saturday on a report of a suspicious person in the 300 block of Jackson Street who was knocking on doors and then walking away. However, while en route to that call, officers were informed that a man had been injured and was bleeding in the 200 block of Pierce Street.
When officers arrived on the scene, they found Allemeier bleeding from an injury to his neck. The Delphos resident said he received the injury from a man who had gained entry into his home.
Officers approached the residence and found the back door unlocked and a lot of blood at the scene. The home was secured and a K-9 and Crime Scene Unit sought from the Allen County Sheriffs Office.
Allemeier then said his wife was still in the house and officers then entered and found Mrs. Allemeier, who was also injured, in the bedroom area of the residence.
After the Allemeiers were transported to the hospital, a K-9 search was made of the area, and the house was processed by an Allen County sheriffs deputy.
No information was released on whether items were taken from the Allemeier house.
Police are currently seeking a young, skinny white male with black hair, possibly wearing cutoff shorts. Anyone with information is asked to contact the Delphos Police Department or Allen County Sheriffs Office.
The investigation is continuing, with no further information forthcoming at this time.
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Scientists Home in on Eczema-Causing Germs – NBC News – NBCNews.com
Posted: July 7, 2017 at 1:46 am
Eczema patients had more Staphylococcus aureus bacteria (golden colonies) on their skin during active flare-ups. A.L. Byrd et al / Science Translational Medicine (2017)
And the team at the National Institutes of Health narrowed down the bad bacteria using genetic sequencing.
The hope is to figure out if the staph bacteria are causing the eczema or are a side-effect, and whether they worsen the symptoms. Eventually, it might be possible to use the knowledge to develop better treatments.
Atopic dermatitis (eczema) is a common inflammatory skin disorder in industrialized countries, affecting 10 to 30 percent of children, Julia Segre of the NIHs National Human Genome Research Institute and colleagues wrote.
Patients with atopic dermatitis suffer from chronic, relapsing, intensely itchy, and inflamed skin lesions and have an increased likelihood of developing asthma and/or hay fever.
Bacteria are a longtime suspect, and one treatment for eczema is a bleach bath to kill them off. But its not usually a long-term fix.
Related:
One team at NIH is working on
But its important to figure out just who the bad actors are, and thats what Segres team did.
They tested 18 children, 11 of whom had eczema. They scraped off the microbes living on their skin during flare-ups and outside of flare-ups, and sequenced the genomes of everything they found.
Staph bacteria were definitely the most variable and seemed most associated with eczema flare-ups, they found.
The more severe atopic dermatitis patients were markedly colonized with a single clade of S. aureus during disease flares, they wrote.
We found that less severe (eczema) patients were colonized with more methicillin-resistant strains, whereas the more severe (eczema) patients were primarily colonized with methicillin-sensitive strains.
Its not clear why. Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) has become very common across the U.S.
But understanding the differences between the various types of bacteria living on healthy skin and itchy skin could lead to ways to prevent allergies, the NIH team hopes.
Because eczema develops so early in life, scientists believe that the bacteria that take up residence on a babys skin can influence whether that child develops allergies. Getting rid of bad bacteria may help prevent the development of allergies, researchers believe.
Eczema is caused by a combination of genetic, immune and environmental factors.
There are many treatments out there now, from simple skin lotions to steroid creams and immune suppressant drugs like tacrolimus. But none of these works for everybody, and the immune suppressant drugs can raise the risk of cancers such as lymphoma.
The
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Possible link found between eczema flare-ups and strain of bacteria – Medical Xpress
Posted: at 1:46 am
July 6, 2017 by Bob Yirka report Eczema patients had more Staphylococcus aureus bacteria (golden colonies) on their skin during active flare-ups. Credit: Carla Shaffer / AAAS
(Medical Xpress)A team of researchers with the National Institutes of Health in the U.S. has found what appears to be a link between eczema flare-ups and a certain strain of bacteria. In their paper published in Science Translational Medicine, the group outlines their study of the connection between the skin ailment and bacteria and what they found.
Eczema is a skin condition causing patches of skin to become itchy and discolored. Besides being an irritant, it also causes emotional problems because most patients are young people, including children. Some studies have also shown it can lead to an increased likelihood of developing allergies. Prior research has suggested it might be possible that the condition is caused by some type of bacteriasome researchers have even found possible candidates. But despite evidence of higher numbers of certain bacteria existing on the skin during flare-ups, no one has been able to figure out if they were a cause or a side effect. In this new effort, the researchers sought to prove they were a likely cause.
The suspected bacteria, a strain of Staphylococcus aureus, lives on most people's skin, but because it appears to reproduce dramatically during flare-ups, the researchers sought a link. They enlisted the assistance of 18 volunteers, all children, and 11 of whom had eczema. The researchers scraped their skin to collect bacterial samples. For those with eczema, samples were collected during flare-ups, between flare-ups and just after flare-ups. Those without eczema only had their skin scraped once to offer as a comparison.
The researchers report that S. aureus was much more prevalent during flare-ups in the volunteers. They also noted that patients who experienced less severe flare-ups had more methicillin-resistant strains of the bacteria than did those who experienced more severe symptoms.
To find out if the bacteria was the cause of the flare-ups or merely a side effect, the researchers collected samples of the bacteria during a flare up and applied it to the skin of test mice. They report that doing so caused skin inflammationmuch more so than when other strains of the same types of bacteria were applied.
The researchers acknowledge that their findings are not definitive proof that S. aureus causes eczema, but believe it indicates it is likely. More work needs to be done to determine why the bacteria suddenly multiply and to find out if there are other factors involved.
Explore further: Skin defences point to eczema therapies
More information: Staphylococcus aureus and Staphylococcus epidermidis strain diversity underlying pediatric atopic dermatitis, Science Translational Medicine (2017). DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.aal4651 , http://stm.sciencemag.org/content/9/397/eaal4651
Abstract The heterogeneous course, severity, and treatment responses among patients with atopic dermatitis (AD; eczema) highlight the complexity of this multifactorial disease. Prior studies have used traditional typing methods on cultivated isolates or sequenced a bacterial marker gene to study the skin microbial communities of AD patients. Shotgun metagenomic sequence analysis provides much greater resolution, elucidating multiple levels of microbial community assembly ranging from kingdom to species and strain-level diversification. We analyzed microbial temporal dynamics from a cohort of pediatric AD patients sampled throughout the disease course. Species-level investigation of AD flares showed greater Staphylococcus aureus predominance in patients with more severe disease and Staphylococcus epidermidis predominance in patients with less severe disease. At the strain level, metagenomic sequencing analyses demonstrated clonal S. aureus strains in more severe patients and heterogeneous S. epidermidis strain communities in all patients. To investigate strain-level biological effects of S. aureus, we topically colonized mice with human strains isolated from AD patients and controls. This cutaneous colonization model demonstrated S. aureus strainspecific differences in eliciting skin inflammation and immune signatures characteristic of AD patients. Specifically, S. aureus isolates from AD patients with more severe flares induced epidermal thickening and expansion of cutaneous T helper 2 (TH2) and TH17 cells. Integrating high-resolution sequencing, culturing, and animal models demonstrated how functional differences of staphylococcal strains may contribute to the complexity of AD disease.
2017 Medical Xpress
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Dr. Cannaday’s eczema cure, part 2 – Sedalia Democrat
Posted: July 5, 2017 at 10:46 pm
Sedalia dermatologist Dr. Julian Cannaday achieved fame and wealth treating eczema, a skin disease marked by rough, itchy, scaly patches on the skin. In the book he wrote advocating his treatment for eczema, he questioned the currently available treatments and the doctors who prescribed them. He also offered his own cure.
Cannaday proposed that eczema was difficult to cure because most physicians treated the effects and ignored the cause. He believed he knew the cause, which he claimed was the buildup of acid in the blood and the inability of the body to cleanse the blood, forcing the acid to be excreted through the skin, which developed itchy patches where the acid seeped out. His explanation, and the certainty with which he pronounced it, is interesting, in that the exact cause of eczema remains unknown.
The website of the prestigious Mayo Clinic suggests several contributing factors, including dry irritable skin caused by too much exposure to hot or cold water or harsh cleaning agents, allergies to dyes or perfumes in soaps or lotions, and environmental conditions such as exposure to hot dry air. Cannaday explains that these factors may aggravate eczema by irritating skin already damaged by the acid excreted through the skin.
Some treatments offered during the early 20th century tried to kill germs that were found in the scabs that developed on the skin. Cannaday believed the germs were carried by the fingers of the patient who scratched the intensely itching skin and were not the cause of the disease. In addition, the things prescribed to treat the skintar, zinc, carbolic acid, corrosive sublimates [used] to kill the germs were so strong they injured the skin
Cannaday dismissed some of the treatments proposed by other doctors, such as cod liver oil, though a deficiency of Vitamin D, a substance found in cod liver oil, may contribute to eczema. Cannaday also dismissed ointments prescribed by other doctors.
Cannadays treatment consisted of the use of a diet that avoided foods that build up acid during digestion. His prescribed a special diet that he said would allow the patient to eat enough food to keep hunger away while not building up acid.
The second part of Cannadays treatment was a blood tonic taken as either pills or liquid form three times per day. He believed the tonic would improve digestion.
The third part of his treatment was the use of a special wash for the affected skin.
Cannadays book does not list the foods allowed on his diet, nor does it give any hints as to the composition of the tonic or the wash. For the treatment, one had to pay $12.50 ($308 in todays purchasing power) for two months worth of tonic, powder to mix with water to make the wash, and a written copy of the diet.
We still do not know the exact nature of Cannadays cure. Perhaps someday, someone will find in the attic a copy of the diet, a tonic pill or two, and some of the wash power so they can be analyzed for their content.
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How To Treat Eczema on Your Face – Men’s Health
Posted: at 10:46 pm
Men's Health | How To Treat Eczema on Your Face Men's Health As someone who has struggled with facial eczema since childhood, I can say that dealing with it, let alone treating it, can be hell. It wasn't until I started to notice the hallmark symptomsitchy red, scaly patches that I realized my generic ... |
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Penis after taking levitra professional – Levitra professional international mail order – Longboat Key News
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Young mum praises 4 miracle moisturiser for ‘curing’ her little girl’s … – Mirror.co.uk
Posted: July 2, 2017 at 8:45 am
A three-year-old girl who has been plagued with painful eczema since birth has been cured by a 3.99 Boots moisturiser, her mother has claimed.
Evie-Rae's eczema left her bleeding, scratching and unable to sleep, the Nottingham Post reports .
Mother, Paige Sweeney, 23, from Strelley, Nottingham was desperate for a cure and took her little girl for countless appointments with a dermatologist, who prescribed the toddler antibiotics and steroid cream.
However despite attending appointments every eight weeks and trying a range of different medications, Evie-Rae's skin still flared up in painful rashes around her mouth, on her hands and in the creases at the back of her knees.
Paige decided to buy a 3.99 bottle of Child's Farm baby moisturiser from Boots while out shopping and within a week her daughter's skin had cleared up.
She said: "I've tried everything in an attempt to help Evie-Rae. She has had eczema since she was born, then when she was five weeks old she was diagnosed with a milk allergy.
"Her eczema was so painful that she didn't sleep through the night until she was two. She was constantly scratching and bleeding.
"We saw a dermatologist every eight weeks for two-and-a-half years, but nothing we tried seemed to work. It was awful to see her in so much pain."
She continued: "I saw the moisturising cream on the shelf in Boots and decided to give it a go. Evie-Rae also has a nut, soya and egg allergy, so we have to be careful with what we give her.
"Within a matter of days I could see her skin starting to clear up. I couldn't believe it. The NHS could save a fortune if they put it on prescription."
The unexpected reaction prompted Paige to post on Facebook - and the before and after images ended up being shared more than 40,000 times.
As a result, Childs Farm's founder Joanna Jensen, who launched the company in 2010 due to her own daughters' fine hair and sensitive skin, got in touch and paid Paige and Evie-Rae a visit.
Joanna said: "Paige and Evie-Rae's story is not uncommon to us - but they have shown how one small change can make all the difference.
"Since Paige shared her pictures on Facebook, the moisturiser sales have skyrocketed, flying off the shelves at the rate of one bottle per minute.
"I was delighted to meet Paige, her sister and Evie-Rae - it was the least I could do to thank them personally for sharing their experience with other parents, and doing wonders for our business.
"We are a small, rural business in Hampshire, competing in a space dominated by Global Pharmaceutical companies.
"We are constantly overwhelmed by the love and support we get for our brand from parents and their children - and all because I wanted to make bath time more fun and less itchy for my own girls."
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Mum calls for 4 ‘miracle’ cream that cured her baby’s eczema to be … – The Independent
Posted: June 29, 2017 at 10:45 am
A mother has praised a 3.99 high street miracle cream that she says helped cure her daughter's painful eczema in just a week.
Paige Sweeney, 23, from Nottingham, spent more than two years taking her daughter Evie-Rose to dermatologists trying to find a cure for her skin condition, but nothing worked.
Instead, her baby girl was left with battling with painful patches on her hands, mouth and backs of knees that she would scratch until she bled.
As a last resort, the concerned mother decided to buy the 3.99 cream after she spotted it at a local Boots store.
And, to her amazement, baby Evies eczema had cleared up within a week.
However, the National Eczema Association points out that when it comes to treatments, not everyone will respond in the same way. "It's best to familiarise yourself with all of the options and talk to your doctor to find a treatment regimen that works for you."
Describing it as a miracle cream, the mother-of-one is now calling for Childs Farm baby moisturiserto be available on prescription and says that it could save the NHS a fortune.
I saw the moisturising cream on the shelf in Boots and decided to give it a go, Sweeney told the Daily Mail.
Evie-Rae also has a nut, soya and egg allergy, so we have to be careful with what we give her, but I could see the ingredients were all natural.
Paige Sweeney spent more than two years taking her daughter Evie-Rose to dermatologists trying to find a cure for her skin condition (Facebook: Paige Sweeney)
Within a matter of days I could see her skin starting to clear up. I couldn't believe it.
After suffering with eczema since she was born, Evie-Rae had to endure painful rashes all over her body which, despite being prescribed a range of antibiotics and steroid creams, could not be controlled.
Evie-Rae battled with painful patches on her hands, mouth and backs of knees that she would scratch until she bled (Image: Paige Sweeney)
Sweeney has since taken to Facebook to post Evie-Raes before and after images which have now been shared more than 30,000 times.
While some creams seem to bring incredible results to some children, they may not work on others.
To her amazement baby Evies eczema had cleared up within a week thanks to the 'miracle' cream (Image: Paige Sweeney)
A number of other specialist baby creams are on the market aimed at children, including Weleda White Mallow Body Lotion, MooGoo Irritable Skin Balm, and Green People Organic Babies soothing baby salve.
The NHS points out that there are a number of different possible treatments for people - including avoiding triggers, intensive moisturising, and using topical corticosteroids.
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A new innovative treatment for eczema could be on its way, researchers say – Netdoctor
Posted: at 10:45 am
Our skin is home to all sorts of different types of bacteria, viruses and fungi, and for decades scientists have hypothesised that these complex societies of microbes are at least partly to blame for common conditions such as acne and eczema.
However, it now seems that bacteria could also be part of the treatment, too. Dermatologists at the University of California in San Diego recently came up with a novel microbial treatment for eczema which is thought to affect one in five children and one in 20 adults in the UK the recipe for which is actually pretty straightforward.
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Lead dermatologist Dr Richard Gallo and his team discovered that Staphylococcus hominis and Staphylococcus epidermidis two harmless bacteria of the human skin microbiome have the ability to kill off Staphylococcus aureus, which is known to play a role in eczema.
Having swabbed the first two types of bacteria from the skin of several volunteers who suffered with eczema. The team then grew them in a lab and later incorporated them into an easy-to-apply lotion. Upon using the cream on their forearms, the levels of helpful skin bacteria was drastically increased in the volunteers almost eliminating S. aureus entirely within 24 hours. The report reads:
"These findings show how commensal skin bacteria protect against pathogens and demonstrate how dysbiosis (a microbial imbalance) of the skin microbiome can lead to disease."
Getty Ross Whitaker
Speaking to the New York Times, Elizabeth Grice, a research dermatologist and microbiologist at the University of Pennsylvania who was not involved in the experiment, said:
"[This is] the first time anything like this has been shown What remains to be seen is whether this kind of treatment can reduce the severity of skin disease over the long term."
Despite this huge step forward in the treatment of skin conditions, scientists say there is still a lot to learn about what microbial ecosystems look like on healthy skin, how they change during illness, and how to safely interfere before we'll get to see any products on the market.
However, Dr Gallo's comment that "there are so many new potent medicines right under our nose" although specifically referring to the bacterial makeup of our skin isn't actually that far from the truth.
Earlier this week we reported that something as simple as heading out in the summer sun can help reduce eczema symptoms. It was found that UV light triggers a release of nitric oxide into the blood stream, dampening inflammation and therefore reducing symptoms such as itchiness and redness. Professor Richard Weller, senior lecturer in Dermatology at the University of Edinburgh, said:
"It is clear that the health benefits of sunlight stretch far beyond vitamin D and we are starting to fill in these blank spaces."
The first study was published in the journal Science Translational Medicine, and the latter in the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology.
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