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About Is Eczema Curable? So What Can Cure Eczema

Is eczema curable? Find out what can cure eczema

From Anonymous: Get your book group to slip on sneaks and chat…

7.Dyshidrosis. (pomphylox, the id reaction, chronic hand eczema, dyshidrotic eczema) Google images and dermnet.nz …… does it look like this?

It is allergy to a dermatophyte, which is any kind of skin loving ‘bug’. Mold, yeast, bacteria, virus, parasite, pollen. It could be anywhere on or in your body. The rash on the hands(or feet) is just a red flag showing the immune reaction to the dermatophyte. Take anti-histamines for immediate relief. Fexofenadine 180mg, and 8 hours later 60mg, then every 8 hours 60mg. (Allegra to Americans and Sanofi-Aventis give out samples if you ask nicely) This is not the cure. But it will stop the itching. Go to dyshidrosis@yahoogroups for more information. http//dyshidrosis.co.uk (my website).

This condition is your immune system over-reacting to the presence of a dermatophyte.

The most coåmmon dermatophyte is Candida in its dimorphic, mycelial form in the intestines. Which is often diagnosed as Irritable Bowel Syndrome. (IBS)

The cure is really simple, but I very much doubt you can get your doctor to prescribe it for you.

You need a 28 day course of sugar free NYSTATIN by drops, 2 million units daily. That is 5 drops 4 times a day: then a 2 week break, then repeat. If this does not work (and I would bet the cost of your doctor visit it does.) you need a drug called Toctino, to be taken for 90 days. This is expensive, and not great for your liver, you will find a cheaper way on the links at dyshidrosis@yahoogroups.com.

I am studying this condition, also called the ‘Id reaction”. Can I ask you to tell your doctor to refer to page 651, chapter 17 in the 1st volume of the Textbook of Dermatology by Rook, Wilkingson and Ebling.?

You have to realize this is NOT contact dermatitis, and it is not eczema This is a special sort of allergy, and must NOT be treated with steroids and cortisone creams and injection at all. This makes it spread..

All the creams you put on your hand will do nothing for the cure of the condition, but soaking your hand in warm water and vinegar will neutralize the histamine and give you a couple of days relief from itching until the histamine builds up again. Neuragena Norwegian Formula glycerine cream under cotton gloves at night is the least irritant.

Some people find bleach baths help, same applies, neutralizes histamine. But also reduces the fungal load on the skin, and if your dyshidrosis is caused by a seasonal airbourne mold, this is the best treatment.

Podiatrists see a lot more of this condition in response to Tinea, which is athlete’s foot. MD doctors have only out of date treatments and it is a dogma that steroids will take down the inflammation. True, but they cause the spread to new histamine receptors. In fact, it is my theory that steroid/hormonal changes, ie puberty, the pill, pregnancy and pumping iron and the peri menopause which are all hormonal/steroid changes are the inciting cause for the yeast Candida Albicans to morph into the opportunistic pathogen of the mycelia form. This is why it is not detected on allergy tests. Everybody has Candida, but not everybody has candidiasis. Only the mycelial form of Candida seems to cause the major histamine reaction which is Dyshidrosis

Patient Questions:

AGE

HEIGHT

WEIGHT

GENDER

WHERE IN THE WORLD ARE YOU?

HOW LONG HAVE YOU HAD THIS? YEARS? MONTHS? PLEASE BE EXACT.

Do you have any symptoms of IBS?

Do you have athlete’s foot? Ringworm? Any persistent fungal or bacterial infection?

What other drugs are you NOW taking?

What other drugs for all and any conditions have You taken for as long back as you can remember?

(in particular, those you took in the year before this condition started.)

Are you on the Pill? (or HRT)

Did you take a course of steroids or antibiotics at about the time the condition started? (prescribed or not…)

Thinking back to when this started: Did you move to a new house? Area? Or a new job? Was it moldy?

Were you trying to get pregnant? pregnant? just been pregnant? breastfeeding?

Thinking back to when this started: did you have a stomach upset that persisted, did you suddenly become ‘intolerant’ to food that had previously not caused you any problems.

Can you a)dd any information about the starting point of the condition? (Hospitalized, new relationship, rash, holiday, stress

Learn more at http://www.curemydisorder.com/links/eczema-remedy

From Anonimo: HaHa That’s funny!! I call it cradle &quot…

Living with eczema at any stage in life, whether during childhood or adulthood, can evolve into a severely troublesome skin problem that can take a toll on your physical and mental health. Learn here https://tr.im/GJQd7

Recurring itchy, dry skin can turn to damaged, red, and raised patches that can lead to agony and embarrassment

Learn more at http://www.curemydisorder.com/links/eczema-remedy

From Anonimo: I have two kids and they both suffer from ecze…

I have two kids and they both suffer from eczema-both in different degrees. The thing is you can avoid water only for so long as gets older. Does your son get any red dry patches on his skin at all? Or is it just dry? We use for my son and daughter a hypoallergenic cream-called Glaxal Base-I buy at the pharmacy and is very thick-doesnt wash off easily and it protects their skin throughout the day. Actually the one we use is mixed Glaxal Base + Glycerin but that’s because my son specially has pretty bad eczema. So I would recommend the plain Glaxal Base- give your baby a bath, make sure he’s thoroughly dried before applying the cream, and massage it if you like, all over his body. Face, hands, arms, legs, belly and back. It’ll help a lot with the dryness. In any case you should talk to your Doctor about it, and find out if he really has eczema and what he recommends. Also I’ve heard that for very mild cases the Aveeno Baby Lotion has helped quite a bit as well. Good Luck!

Learn more at http://www.curemydisorder.com/links/eczema-remedy

From Anonimo: You should go to the doctor. He will give you …

Call Your Doctor If:

– You develop an otherwise unexplained rash and have a family history of eczema or asthma. You should have a medical diagnosis of the condition.

– The inflammation does not respond within a week to treatment with over-the-counter hydrocortisone creams. A physician may suggest more aggressive forms of treatment.

– You develop yellowish to light brown crust or pus-filled blisters over existing patches of eczema. This may indicate a bacterial infection that should be treated with an antibiotic.

– During a flare-up of eczema, you are exposed to anyone with a viral skin disease such as cold sores or genital herpes. Having eczema puts you at increased risk of contracting the viral disorder.

– You develop numerous small, fluid-filled blisters. You may have eczema herpeticum, a rare but potentially serious complication caused by the herpes simplex virus.

Fonte/i: www.WebMD.com/skin-problems-and-treatments/eczema/understanding-eczema-symptoms

Learn more at http://www.curemydisorder.com/links/eczema-remedy

From Anonymous: My little boy had eczema on his cheeks. I was …

Hi Miss Ava

TREATMENT OF ECZEMA (Self-Care at Home)

Removing whatever is causing the allergic reaction is the easiest and most effective treatment. This may be as simple as changing your laundry detergent or as difficult as moving to a new climate or changing jobs.

Prevent dry skin by taking warm (not hot) showers rather than baths. Use a mild soap or body cleanser. Dry yourself very carefully and apply moisturizing skin lotions all over your body. Avoid lotions with fragrances or other irritating substances.

Avoid wearing tight-fitting, rough, or scratchy clothing.

Avoid scratching the rash. If you can’t stop yourself from scratching, cover the area with a dressing. Wear gloves at night to minimize skin damage from scratching.

Anything that causes sweating can irritate the rash. Avoid strenuous exercise during a flare.

If the allergy-causing agent cannot be removed or identified, the next step is to lessen the allergic inflammatory response.

• Apply an nonprescription steroid cream (hydrocortisone) along with anti-itching lotion (menthol/camphor, such as calamine). The cream must be applied as often as possible without skipping days until the rash is gone.

• Diphenhydramine (Benadryl) in pill form may be taken for the itching. Caution – this medication may make you too drowsy to drive a car or operate machinery safely.

• Clean the area with a hypoallergenic soap every day. Apply lubricating cream or lotion after washing.

Avoid physical and mental stress. Eating right, light activity, and adequate sleep will help you stay healthy, which can help prevent flares.

Do not expect a quick response. Eczema is easier to control than cure.

TREATMENT OF ECZEMA (Medical Treatment)

Once your health care provider is sure you have eczema, the mainstays of therapy are anti-inflammatory medication and relief from the itching.

Prescription-strength steroid cream and antihistamine medication are the usual treatments.

Diet restrictions and chemical skin-drying agents may also be offered, but their success is controversial.

For severe cases not responding to high-potency steroid cream, alternate treatments may be tried. These include coal tar, PUVA (psoralen + ultraviolet A light), and chemotherapy agents.

Take Care. Regards.

Learn more at http://www.curemydisorder.com/links/eczema-remedy

From Anonimo: My little boy had eczema on his cheeks. I was …

Call Your Doctor If:

– You develop an otherwise unexplained rash and have a family history of eczema or asthma. You should have a medical diagnosis of the condition.

– The inflammation does not respond within a week to treatment with over-the-counter hydrocortisone creams. A physician may suggest more aggressive forms of treatment.

– You develop yellowish to light brown crust or pus-filled blisters over existing patches of eczema. This may indicate a bacterial infection that should be treated with an antibiotic.

– During a flare-up of eczema, you are exposed to anyone with a viral skin disease such as cold sores or genital herpes. Having eczema puts you at increased risk of contracting the viral disorder.

– You develop numerous small, fluid-filled blisters. You may have eczema herpeticum, a rare but potentially serious complication caused by the herpes simplex virus.

Fonte/i: www.WebMD.com/skin-problems-and-treatments/eczema/understanding-eczema-symptoms

Learn more at http://www.curemydisorder.com/links/eczema-remedy

From Anonymous: I have the some thing. Doc told me to use the …

Eczema is a term of one condition that the skin is irritated, itchy, inflamed, and even broken skin. It is also referred to as atopic dermatitis, the term for broad range of skin condition that generally manifest as chronically inflamed and extremely skin.

Atopic dermatitis begins at any age, but this is not common. 90% of individuals who suffer from atopic dermatitis develop the disorder before 5 years of age. Eczema commonly seen in infants and children.

The bothersome thing of eczema during evening and nighttime, causing disruptions to sleep.

The appearance of Eczema is dry and prone to become scaly rather than wet and encrusted.

The skin sores are dry and red, and may be opened by persistent itching, and also by unconsciously scratching during bedtime.

Irritation and opening of sores may easily lead to infect+ion and scarring, which results in long term physicals. Scary!!! For those who really care about their skin conditions.

Find out of how to reveal the eczema scarring permanently in this book:

Vanish Eczema: freedom from eczema in 3 simple steps by Lee Gardner

Please be advised to avoid harmful steroid, and creams!

Learn more at http://www.curemydisorder.com/links/eczema-remedy

Reducing Illnesses Going Around in School and Raising Test Scores—the Easy Way

Here’s a really interesting report that seems to have gotten lost in the shuffle amid all the disruptions this pandemic spring.
Article in Ed Week
The original paper
The Aliso Canyon gas leak in Southern California was big news a few years ago. As a result, a dozen and a half elementary schools in the area were provided high quality air filtration in every classroom. Measurements were made to assess levels of outdoor pollutants entering the classrooms, and children’s math and reading test scores were also analyzed and put through various comparisons.
Very little outdoor pollution made it into the classrooms, as it turns out, but the filters cleaned up typical indoor pollution. As air quality improved in the schools that received the filters, so did the students’ test scores. A lot. Test scores improved so much, the benefit was “equal to the learning benefits from reducing class sizes or providing intensive tutoring.” While the researchers noted a drop in illnesses and absenteeism among occupants of these classrooms, the improvements could not be attributed to those benefits alone.
Test scores improved so much, the benefit was “equal to the learning benefits from reducing class sizes or providing intensive tutoring.”
While the article and the original paper both bear reading, the benefits of better air quality in schools is not news. Prior research already linked air quality in schools with student test scores and achievement, and poor air quality with student and teacher illnesses and absenteeism (which are further connected to a litany of other ills).
Healthy schools = healthy kids
The EPA even developed a whole body of helpful, evidence-based resources for schools to use, their Tools for Schools, upon which many other well-researched indoor air quality management plans have been based. Indoor air quality management plans are just well-researched strategies that help make schools healthier and keep them that way.  If you want to really delve into the issue, the EPA has an indoor air quality master class webinar series which is free and definitely worth the time:
IAQ Master Class Professional Training Webinar Series
Although this research shows just how dramatically better indoor air quality can improve student performance and reduce illnesses and absenteeism in the classroom, an even greater takeaway should be that:
a) evidence already exists that schools can get such dramatic benefits from adopting indoor air quality management plans, without filtration, and often at very little cost, and
b) using filtration in addition to adopting indoor air quality management plans could be powerful tools to both reducing illnesses spread in schools and improving student achievement.
The well-researched tools to accomplish this have been available to schools, for free, for many years, yet less than half of schools have an indoor air quality management plan, despite the EPA reporting that half of schools have problems related to air quality, and despite the aging school infrastructure—the majority of schools in this country built over 50 years ago.
Although such problems can affect children in poorer districts disproportionately by compounding other factors, rich districts are not immune. Recent research in California schools found inadequate ventilation and poor air circulation (with the attendant harm to learning and student health) in the vast majority of classrooms, around 85% of classrooms they looked at, a finding that confirms previous research. They found new school sites were just as prone to having poor ventilation as older ones.
It has always been something of an ongoing tragedy that this major body of environmental health research hasn’t been recognized and adopted uniformly across the nation, because very small investments can reap such major rewards for our nation’s children.
This may be in part because adopting such plans can seem complicated and is completely voluntary, and next to no legal obligations exist in virtually any states to ensure good air quality in schools or to allow parents recourse to fix things when their children’s schools have air quality problems. I’ve had discussions with school administrators who told me frankly that they follow many regulations and they believed if adopting such plans were important, there would be a law they had to follow. I’ve had discussions with experienced environmental scientists who told me frankly (going back many years, irrespective of partisan turnover in Washington) that they are under considerable political pressure and the best way to get schools the benefits of this research is for the EPA to share what they can and make it voluntary.
And thus the fundamental problem here, a gap in understanding between environmental health scientists and school health stakeholders, including teachers, parents, students, and the doctors who care for them all, leads to an unnecessary and easily-removed health burden on our nation’s children and teachers.
How this school filter research could help students return to schools and colleges
Looking ahead to the fall of 2020, with so many uncertainties and the likelihood of both the flu and Covid-19 surging at the same time, schools and colleges are trying to cope with the staggering adjustments that will have to be made in order to safely return students to campuses.

Unfortunately, the impact on colleges is especially severe with the economic strain of many students, especially international students, staying home, deferring, or simply not going to college at all next fall.  Any livelihoods that depend on gatherings, such as live music and restaurants, travel and tourism, all stand to be hit even worse if there is another surge of infections in the fall, thus compounding the problem for colleges with the greater demand for financial aid as a large percentage of families lose jobs and income. Certainly, a coronavirus vaccine will help, but there is almost no scenario under which there will be a proven effective vaccine in place before fall, and if one is rushed and doesn’t work, or worse, has unexpected, serious consequences, it could undermine faith in other vaccines.
Attention to research like this should be part of the planning picture, because improving indoor air quality doesn’t just demonstrably improve student performance, per considerable research, it also reduces the number of infections the occupants of buildings get and pass around.
Improve indoor air quality, and you reduce the rate of infections and absenteeism, not just in those with asthma, but in everyone. Fewer children and teachers get asthma, and those who have asthma get fewer attacks. This is well-established by decades of environmental science, including specifically in schools.
Adopting an effective framework for indoor air quality management can improve air quality by more than just the simple filtration reported in this paper, and adding filters can mean even greater benefits. Especially since few people seem to be minding proper two-step disinfection, and are using detergent wipes like they’re going out of style. Such products leave residues that build up as dust and cause asthma.
CDC: Avoid disinfectant wipes containing asthmagens
According to the CDC’s Healthy Cleaning and Asthma-Safer Schools:  “AVOID DISINFECTANT WIPES  Disinfectant wipes are used regularly, but they usually contain asthmagens. “ (Substances that are known to cause asthma.) It is possible to achieve the same or better cleaning and disinfection results without causing asthma at the same time.
We all know that asthma is a risk factor when it comes to Covid-19, and people can also develop inflammation in the lungs that makes them susceptible from these same environmental influences short of having diagnosable asthma. The CDC cleaning recommendations, the two-step process I blogged about earlier, can be done—in fact, are better done—without increasing asthmagenic chemicals in the environment which can increase susceptibility to infection.
Another serious problem that schools face this fall, is that environmental scientists have also long known that when a closed up space, like a school, has been shuttered and unoccupied for a period of time, when it is reopened, the new occupants stir up all kinds of stuff that worsens air quality and causes spikes in infectious diseases and other known consequences of poor air quality. If this is not understood and addressed before schools, workplaces, colleges, and other communal spaces reopen globally in the fall, the predictable, attendant spikes in upper respiratory symptoms AND infections could cause a preventable wave of more deaths and lengthier shutdowns.
When a school has been closed up for a period of time, when it is reopened, the new occupants stir up stuff that worsens air quality and causes spikes in upper respiratory infections and other known consequences of poor air quality.
Seriously adopting indoor air quality management plans in all schools now, even without filtration, could help reduce this phenomenon, which could cause panic in the fall as schools and colleges around the world reopen for the majority of students after being closed up for so long. Filtration could reduce problems further, and it could be an important tool for allowing more normal life again as one of many tools.
From what I learned about the topic, filtration is actually a poor second cousin to implementing an indoor air quality management plan. It’s better to avoid building up unhealthy chemicals and particles in the first place than to try to filter them out, but in practice, I have observed that the easy, cheap indoor air quality management steps seem to be the hardest for people to believe work.
The EPA has done previous research with filters in classrooms, when a known environmental problem could not otherwise be remediated (mold), with good results, but they did not use commercial filters which tend to be too small and too loud. They used cabinet-sized filters that resulted in more robust filtration without adding noise to the class room environment. (Don’t quote me on this, but I vaguely remember the company involved in that work was also involved in providing the plug-in filters for this research.)
One of the reasons I brought up the question in my last post—why are people still getting sick?—and wondered if it’s possible to keep detailed data on new infections, is the possibility that a more refined understanding of exactly how people get sick in groups (or not), and how they don’t, in as much detail as possible, could help mitigate the extreme response, even mitigate the indiscriminate use of disinfectants.
Such an understanding would especially help schools and colleges understand the parameters for safe return of students. In the meantime, measures to improve indoor air quality need to become a priority, as they can be adopted while students are home, and are already proven to significantly improve student performance and reduce the spread of infectious illnesses in schools.
–AJ
 
*I should note that while mechanical filtration can filter out viruses, it’s not necessary to do that in order to get the benefits above, such as reducing illnesses going around in schools. Simply removing the harmful chemicals (like those that come from mold growing in the environment) and particles that cause damaging health effects like airway inflammation, including “remodeling” of the upper respiratory system from chronic inflammation, is enough to improve student performance and reduce the incidences of colds and flus going around at school.  Further research would be necessary to know the best kind of filtration to get the absolute best reduction of novel coronavirus spread.
Source: New feed

Covid-19 Why are people still getting sick?

Illustration of SARS-CoV-2 from the CDC

After weeks of sheltering in place, as the nation reopens, I would like to know what has been done in the interim to sharpen the understanding of hygiene to contain the virus and allow normal life without fear of making things worse again? Hygiene is not cleaning or killing every germ, it’s what you do to prevent the spread of infection.

The sheltering in place was clearly necessary and saved many lived. But after all these weeks, I am left to wonder why there aren’t more nuanced hygiene instructions? This is not intended as criticism—scientists and doctors working on this problem have been working hard, heroically, really.

But I don’t want to lose sight of the problem solving opportunity here. As public health efforts increase testing, they should also consider taking methodical data on when and how everyone got infected, or likely was infected, down to the nitty gritty details and the spectrum of possibilities, the way the health inspector investigates after food poisoning complaints at restaurants.

Knowing more about exactly why people do get sick from interactions and the kinds of interactions they don’t get sick from—and teasing apart why some people get sick from seemingly similar interactions and others don’t—will make all the difference in whether students can go to school or college in the fall, safely, or people can travel again, or restaurants get customers next month instead of next year. If I were Disneyland or Johns Hopkins University, I would be throwing money at knowing that information.

After all these weeks of lockdown, people are still getting sick. Is it because 6 feet apart isn’t enough? Is it that people aren’t maintaining known recommendations? Are some of those recommendations unnecessary for a lot of circumstances and people? What if we could be resuming, like, 80% of the things we used to do because we understand in better detail how and why people are still getting sick and how to avoid it?

Who is systematically trying to understand human interactions in more detail right now so we understand why infection continues to spread, or when it doesn’t? Contact tracing is necessary, but it’s not the same thing.

The lockdown is like a national allergy elimination diet — you can eliminate everything you eat to stop reacting, but you can’t live like that forever. But you go through the sacrifice because it allows you to track down what causes a reaction so that you can eat almost everything else again and remain healthy.

If you go through the trouble of eliminating everything just to stop reacting, then reintroduce foods simply because you want to get your digestion going again but without truly trying to track down what causes problems at every step, then you lose most of the value of the original sacrifice.

Continuing the lockdown without using it to get a more nuanced understanding of hygiene is like reducing your diet to just toast forever. Reopening the country without understanding the nature of interactions that are still spreading disease and why, is like going to all that trouble to stop eating everything to stop the allergy, only to just start up eating everything willy nilly and losing the advantage of the temporary sacrifice.

Many people and parts of the country are probably safe to resume life. But we don’t know the nuances of the conditions under which those behaviors go from safe to dangerous and vice versa. Just expanding testing isn’t going to tell us that. We need a systematic attempt to understand how this virus is transmitted and how to prevent it, and our current situation where almost everyone is still sheltering in place but the disease continues to be transmitted is the ideal time to do that.

Having that knowledge could allow us to better move forward confidently and safely, and resume more normal life. We need this prevalence testing and contact tracing, but I hope researchers will also start taking detailed data that allows a more nuanced look at when and how infection is being spread, and when and how it is not being spread. Is it really necessary to shut down the beaches, for example? Knowing more detail about the conditions of how the infection is spreading in the world now, and not spread, hand-in-hand with testing, could help make such decisions with confidence.
Source: New feed