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Eczema: Are You Scratching Your Head Trying to Help Patients? – AAP News


AAP News
Eczema: Are You Scratching Your Head Trying to Help Patients?
AAP News
Eczema (atopic dermatitis) is a common, chronic and recurrent disease that causes much morbidity for patients and their families, and it need not! One of the biggest hurdles to achieving such success with eczema management is the vast amount of …

eczema – Google News

Eczema: Are You Scratching Your Head Trying to Help Patients? – AAP News


AAP News
Eczema: Are You Scratching Your Head Trying to Help Patients?
AAP News
Eczema (atopic dermatitis) is a common, chronic and recurrent disease that causes much morbidity for patients and their families, and it need not! One of the biggest hurdles to achieving such success with eczema management is the vast amount of …

eczema – Google News

Eczema: Are You Scratching Your Head Trying to Help Patients? – AAP News


AAP News
Eczema: Are You Scratching Your Head Trying to Help Patients?
AAP News
Eczema (atopic dermatitis) is a common, chronic and recurrent disease that causes much morbidity for patients and their families, and it need not! One of the biggest hurdles to achieving such success with eczema management is the vast amount of …

eczema – Google News

How to Stop Scratching Eczema At Night

Eczema can be quite a nuisance to our daily lives. Between the itchiness, cracking and redness, you may feel like you want to hide under the covers all day. Then in the stillness of the night, the itching just seems worse and scratching just happens without thought.  So let’s talk about how to stop scratching eczema at night.

Have you ever woken up from intense itching or have subconsciously scratched your skin raw during your sleep? Does your little one whimper through the night, scratching at their skin until it bleeds? If so, then you’ll want to check out our blog post this week that discusses tips and recommendations for soothing you or your little one’s eczema scratching at night.

Please keep in mind that although these treatments can relieve eczema, we are in no way medical professionals. If you’re experiencing severe eczema symptoms like an infection, it is best to seek medical advice immediately.

Why Does Eczema Itch?

Prior to discussing tips on how to soothe the eczema itch, it’s important to understand where it comes from. According to Dr. Peter Lio, eczema is caused by a leaky skin barrier. (Read more about that here: What Causes Eczema? With Dr. Peter Lio). Once the skin is leaky, the barrier becomes more damaged, looses more water and in turn triggers an inflammation response. There is also a variety of other possible stimuli that can make eczema worse at night, but almost every eczema case is unique.

That being said, prior to soothing your overnight eczema itch, it’s important to understand what might be triggering your flare-ups to begin with. Are you allergic to certain foods or materials? Are you experiencing more stress than usual? These are all questions which are important to ask in order to get to the bottom of what causes your eczema itch.

Not sure what’s triggering your eczema? Make sure to check out our blog post What Triggers Eczema? With Dr. Peter Lio to discover a variety of triggers that may be causing you itchy eczema.

How to Stop Scratching Eczema at Night

Anti-Itch Moisturizer

If you’ve already identified your trigger (or have not) and are experiencing intense overnight itching, you’ll want to opt for an anti-itch natural eczema treatment. By applying a cream or balm that is meant for itchy skin, you can find much needed relief.

A wonderful anti-itch cream is Emily Skin Soothers for Itchy Eczema that contains olive oil, beeswax and carefully selected Chinese herbs to help you curb the need to scratch. This cream is known for soothing dry skin and calming itchy, red eczema and rashes.

Another great choice is the Organic Manuka Skin Soothing Cream – a thick, nourishing balm that also contains beeswax and olive oil. This cream is thick and provides moisturizing to even the driest and itchiest skin. An added benefit, it contains Manuka honey and Manuka oil which have anti-bacterial properties.

Lastly, this Itchy Skin Rash Treatment from Zi Zai Dermatology is an excellent emollient for both dry and itchy skin. With a combination of Chinese herbs, beeswax and olive oil, it targets the eczema itch at it’s root – dryness.

Scratch Mittens/Pajamas

Another great tool for soothing the overnight eczema itch are scratch mittens for both adults and children. Scratch mittens not only protect the skin from intense scratching, but can protect against certain allergens or irritants that may be triggering your eczema.

If your little one is suffering from daytime or overnight eczema itch, make sure to check out these ScratchMeNot Flip Mitten Sleeves for Babies and Children. These mittens have been a lifesaver for so many parents with little ones suffering from itchy eczema. They are easy to put on, stay put and best of all – the mittens fold open for play with the sleeves in place.

Another great option is pajamas that include anti-scratch mittens like this One-Piece Footed Pajama for Kids or these Scratch Mittens Pajama Top or Footed Pajama Pants for older children. These pajamas essentially prevent overnight scratching, which can help your child’s eczema heal and protect their skin from further irritation.

If you’re suffering from overnight itching yourself, then we strongly recommend the Comfymitt Top for Adults. This top includes closed, protective mittens, so that you do not subconsciously scratch yourself raw overnight. 

Wet/Dry Wraps

Have you looked into both wet and dry wrapping? They can work wonders on dry, itchy skin and when worn overnight can give you comfort all night long. Both these methods use a rich moisturizer mixed with bandages or wraps to allow the emollients to permeate the skin. With dry wraps, which is a bit easier and less messy, you wear a dry layer of clothing over the emollient for at least two hours, but hopefully overnight for better results. With wet wrapping, which is a bit more intense, but can provide quick results, you wear a layer of damp clothing over the eczema and a dry later on top of that. Many eczema sufferers have found relief with these methods.

If you’re interested in getting started, make sure to check out our Dry Wrapping and Wet Wrap Therapy blog posts for all the details. All you’ll need is an anti-itch moisturizer like one of the above, as well as wraps like these WrapESoothe Body Bands or Remedywear Eczema Sleeves that can be used on localized eczema like behind the knees or on the elbows. For more options like leggings for eczema on the legs or tops for chest or back eczema, take a look at this line from Remedywear, clothing for eczema with zinc, which works great for dry wrapping.

 

Non-Toxic Laundry Alternatives 

Lastly, if you think your eczema might be triggered by irritants or allergens, maybe take a look at what detergents you’re using – especially on those bed sheets! Many laundry detergents contain harmful, toxic ingredients that can be causing your eczema to itch, specifically during the night.

There are many wonderful natural laundry alternatives, such as this SmartKlean Laundry Ball that contains no added fragrances and is 100% hypoallergenic. Even if you don’t find you’re allergic to detergent ingredients, those same ingredients can be so harsh on the skin. Switching to a mineral ball like the one above or soap nuts can help reduce irritation.

Elimination Diet

If natural eczema treatments or therapy methods aren’t working, you may want to look inside your body to see if certain foods are causing your eczema to trigger. An elimination diet is a structured elimination test (that can be done with your doctor or naturopath) to determine what foods might be causing your eczema and itching at night. Many eczema sufferers have learned to cure their eczema, or at least improve it, just by changing their diet.

To read more about it, make sure to check out our post: Our Eczema Elimination Diet Success (How You Can Do it Too!).

 

How do you control your eczema scratching at night? Let us know in the comments below!

The post How to Stop Scratching Eczema At Night appeared first on itchylittleworld.com.

itchylittleworld.com

How I stopped scratching my eczema

Stop scratching. Sounds so simple doesn’t it? Scratching. It is solely responsible for the perpetual broken, weeping, bleeding skin and the devastating damage that stops eczema from having any chance of healing. So how do you stop? It’s not easy, but I’m going to tell you how I broke the cycle and it’s not how you might expect.
beczema

Mindful scratching – can it help eczema?

Before I begin I strongly believe that berating a person for scratching their is the worst kind of well meaning advice. Trust me, if you have eczema and it’s in full force, you cannot stop scratching. And sometimes that is OK. Don’t beat yourself up if you can’t resist that horrible incessant itch that seems to live deep inside the skin, and only subsides when you’ve damaged your skin.

The Eczema Solution by Sue Armstrong-Brown
I wanted to share with you something that I’m trying at the moment. It’s an idea I’ve seen discussed before in a book called The Eczema Solution.

But whilst I tried to break the ‘habit’ of itching back then, it didn’t work. Because if you have things in your life that are triggering allergic reactions and hives your skin will be on fire and almost impossible to avoid scratching unless someone ties you up!

If you can take a step back and notice that what you’re doing is often habitual then there are huge benefits from learning to acknowledge, analyse and then begin to reduce the amount of times you itch.

First of all, why do you itch? Can you teach yourself to scratch less? Because there are definitely different kinds of scratching:

The many differnt types of itching/scratching:

  1. Unavoidable scratching – when the irritation or allergic reaction is too strong to avoid
  2. Little Scratching – when you have a minor itch, tickle, pain… call it what you will and reach to relieve it.
  3. Habitual scratching – When it becomes so commonplace that you scratch every time you do certain things, like apply emollient, go to the loo, get changed, shower, overheat… It’s almost like you just scratch regardless of whether you are itchy and then once you are scratching, your skin is itchy because you itched it! Make sense?
  4. Waking up the itch – When you are just rough with your skin and you take it from calm and OK to furious itching just by rubbing, not applying moisturiser gently… whatever it is. You can ‘wake up’ your skin and cause itchiness by mistake.

If this sounds familiar to you then think about reducing some of these, because there are so many times when it would be possible to reduce scratching

I think I scratch for a number of reasons and not just because the act of tearing at an itch can feel amazing, and it the only way (our brain tricks us here) to stop the annoyance and pain of the itch. I think that I often scratch almost as a punishment to myself. I could treat my skin better but it’s almost like I’ve decided it’s not worth it, that my skin is awful anyway so I give myself permission to destroy it. I might as well. Not nice to read or acknowledge really. But this is mindfulness.

What is mindfulness?

First of all, mindfulness is NOT about being happy all the time and seeing the positive in everything. I am not suggesting for a moment that if you were more in control, more positive, more confident or kinder to yourself and lived every second in the moment that it would be any easier to avoid scratching. Far from it. It is more about truthfully accepting a situation and then looking for ways to improve things, if you can. And if you can’t, learning to live with things the way they are. It’s not about being happy all the time. It’s OK to feel bad about having eczema. It’s not fair, but it is what you have so you need to accept it and learn to control it, rather than it controlling you.

What I’m suggesting is merely that you see it for what it is. It’s the first step to understanding the itch and then in turn learning how to control it, even just some of the time.

When you scratch, don’t try to stop, just notice it. Think to yourself, ‘Oh there I go, scratching again’, and just see it. Really see it.

  • Why did you scratch?
  • What made you scratch?
  • Where were you?
  • What were you doing?
  • How were you feeling?
  • Was there a trigger or did it seem just gratuitous orgasmic itching it?

To start off with just acknowledge that you itch and think about why. Don’t stress. Don’t beat yourself up about it. Don’t feel bad. It is what it is. The book, The Eczema Solution suggests getting a clicker to count every time you scratch. I did this and it easily ran into the thousands. Quite shocking to acknowledge the sheer level of discomfort.

You have eczema, psoriasis or whatever skin condition makes you itch like blazes and it’s a natural reaction. It’s evolution; if you go back to caveman times, the instinct would have been to brush off the insect from the skin in case it bit you.

Just be. Just be the eczema person you are. The next step, after days or weeks of assessing the status quo is to begin to change the habit of a lifetime. No mean feat! But there are many techniques for doing this. These will be the subject of another blog but it’s not rocket science. You’ll have to keep reading the blog to find out, but think about just observing, looking at the itching area, if you can see it. What does the skin look like? It is raised? Bumpy with hives, or red, sore, scabbed etc. Think about whether you could avoid scratching. Just ignoring an itch can be very distracting, but can you stroke, hold, press, tap or employ avoidance tactics or keep your hands busy.

It’s not going to be easy but can we do this chaps? I think every potential scratch avoided is a minor victory so good luck! I have so far seen off an avalanche of potential skin destroying itches but I have given in to lots too. It’s going to take time… but I am determined to try this.

The post Mindful scratching – can it help eczema? appeared first on talkhealth Blog.

talkhealth Blog

Solutions to Eczema Itching – Relief From Scratching the Rash and Ways to Stop Skin Inflammation

For many people with atopic dermatitis, it is the eczema itching that is the most frustrating aspect. Itching is a constant reminder of a problem. When you itch it disrupts your connection with whatever you are involved with. When I speak with clients with eczema rashes, psoriasis or other skin issues , itching is their constant reminder of something being wrong.

Scratching an itchy skin rash is almost impossible to resist. But when you scratch blisters, red bumps or patches you are making the skin problem worse. We don’t always remember to wash our hands and this can lead to a bacterial infection. Kids are very prone to this. Even if you do wash your hands, when you have an open sore, blister or pimple irritated by scratching, an external agent that comes in contact with the skin can result in an infection.

Reducing the sensation of itching is important for mental health as well. It is hard to concentrate on anything when you have the urge to scratch yourself frequently. This also can make sleeping tough. Without proper rest, you will slow down healing.

Oils such as coconut oil, olive oil and neem oil are all good for the dry eczema skin rash and can give the skin the moisturizer it sorely needs. Clip your nails and your children’s nails plus file them to remove any sharp edges. Using benadryl for sleep is a good way to get the rest needed. People scratch themselves during sleep so having short nails is important. During the day, there are non-drowsy formulas you can take of antihistamines. Oatmeal baths are soothing to the skin. Take a good B-complex capsule as well as multi-vitamin to build your system back to normal.

Though ultimately you need to find the root of the eczema skin problem and not just relieve the itching symptoms, it is important to not scratch the skin. A combination of stress relief, avoidance of problematical foods, awareness of how much sun your body can take and learning environmental triggers is a complete system to relieve the dermatitis problem.

Use a complete system to relieve the itchy eczema rash. Learn how to find Eczema Itching Relief by getting to the root of the rash problem at http://www.itchyskinrash.net/home-remedies-for-eczema.html

More Atopic Dermatitis Articles

ScratchMeNot – A lasting, scratching solution for eczema in children

By Andrea Thomas (see bio below) What started off as a tiny red patch of skin on my newborn daughter, turned into a journey of eczema, skin allergies and craziness. It also inspired me to invent the ScratchMeNot Flip Mitten, a solution that would forever change our family’s experience with eczema. My daughter was only 2 […]
It’s an Itchy Little World

Psoriasis: Scratching The Surface

AppId is over the quota AppId is over the quota Main Category: Eczema / Psoriasis
Article Date: 16 Oct 2012 – 2:00 PST Current ratings for:
Psoriasis: Scratching The Surface
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Psoriasis is a chronic inflammatory skin disorder that affects approximately 2% of the world’s population.

A group of inflammatory molecules known as interleukins activate an immune response that causes itchy skin, but it is unclear how the skin cells and immune cells communicate.


In a study published in the Journal of Clinical Investigation, researchers led by Manfred Kopf at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich,http://www.eczemablog.net/ Switzerland found that mice lacking interleukin-36 (IL-36) were protected from immune-mediated skin inflammation. These results indicate that IL-36 might be a useful therapeutic target in the treatment of psoriasis.


TITLE: Psoriasiform dermatitis is driven by interleukin-36-mediated dendritic cell-keratinocyte crosstalk


View this article at: http://www.jci.org/articles/view/63451?key=94c50375c771888cd255

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Click ‘references’ tab above for source.
Visit our eczema / psoriasis section for the latest news on this subject. Please use one of the following formats to cite this article in your essay, paper or report:

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Journal of Clinical Investigation. “Psoriasis: Scratching The Surface.” Medical News Today. MediLexicon, Intl., 16 Oct. 2012. Web.
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‘Psoriasis: Scratching The Surface’

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