What medicine does children eczema take?
The most common eczema in clinic is hand eczema. Hand eczema and tinea manuum are not a disease. Ms Luo has been very upset recently, because she doesn't know when a piece of little red dot grew on her palm. It was just a little itchy at first, and she didn't care if she scratched it. But then the erythema became a piece, and even the fingers and the back of the hand grew blisters, and when they scratched, water came out. Ms. Luo thought that she had tinea manuum, and she applied ointment against fungal infection for several days, but it had no effect at all. Ms. Luo felt itchy, painful and ugly, so she had to go to the hospital for dermatological treatment. After fungal detection, the diagnosis was that her hand disease was eczema rather than tinea manuum. Eczema and tinea manuum both occur on the hands, but they are completely different diseases. Tinea manus is a fungal infectious skin disease, while eczema manus is an allergic disease. Tinea manus generally occurs between the palms or fingers, and the fingers are eroded or desquamated. The skin lesions are papules, papules and blisters. It often occurs in one hand, accompanied by thickening, filth and shedding of nails, and the fungal test of skin lesions is positive. The treatment of tinea manuum can be treated with antifungal therapy. However, hand eczema usually occurs on the back of fingers or palms, back of hands and wrists. Skin lesions are subacute or chronic eczema, and the symptoms are papules, papules, blisters and erythema, which are easy to seep out, the boundaries are unclear, and fingers are often not involved. In winter, chapped skin often appears, and the fungal examination of skin lesions is negative. The commonly used drugs in clinic are snake gall bitter cypress toner. At the expert's suggestion, Ms. Luo used snake gall bitter cypress toner for two months and all recovered.