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londonbaby
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Topic: Excema Tips Posted: 29 November 2010 at 5:23pm |
I wanted to start a bit of a discussion about baby excema as I noticed a few of us are dealing with it...DS has just started getting a bit of dry flaky cradle cap and I have now noticed some rashy looking stuff on his neck, behind his ears and behind his knees and elbows... his whole body is also covered in small bumps...
I am really gutted as I have never used anything but water and almond oil on his skin as I have a family history of allergies so have been REALLY careful. I have started taking Excema Shield probiotic and Flaxseed Oil....I brought the organic 'Gaia' range so I could shampoo his hair and moisturize him....what does everyone else do for their babies skin? Has anyone tried an allergy test or cutting out dairy?
Thanks ladies :)
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1st_Time_Preggies
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Location: Auckland
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Posted: 29 November 2010 at 5:53pm |
My DS has had BAD ezcema on and off since he was little. I found the only thing that worked was to moisturise moisturise, moisturise. At every opportunity. I use Aveeno Baby (the smaller one) which I find quite good.
When his ezcema was really bad, I used Xma-Ease which you can buy from the chemist. It was awesome!
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Lucky apple
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Posted: 29 November 2010 at 6:46pm |
There are a few old threads on eczema if you do a wee search - here are a couple :-)
here
here
and here
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High9
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Posted: 29 November 2010 at 7:25pm |
Basically cutting out dairy and allergy tests are only done in extreme cases and are usually a last resort...
Lily had quite bad eczema around 3-5 months but the doc wouldn't do anything other than 1st prescribe a fatty type of cream to moisturise 24/7 and as a soap substitute, when that didn't work we got steroid cream - which worked so there was no need for allergy testing or cutting foods out though I did notice foods in my diet affected her eczema (bread products and certain dairy) - Plunket had me cut them out but my doc said 'ABSOLUTELY NOT!!!' so that was that...
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blondy
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Posted: 29 November 2010 at 8:04pm |
Personally, I would ask to get allergy testing done if the eczema continues and becomes a problem AT ALL for you or baby. Our GP was also reluctant to refer us, but in the end I specifically asked for a referral to an immunologist.
Eczema can be caused by heat etc, but generally is a sign of the body reacting to allergens - especially if you have a family history of allergies (as we did). At first, I was also in the "it's just eczema" boat, and was planning on managing it with creams etc (because I also had bad eczema as a child, and assumed that's just what our lot was!) .... but I'm so glad we did further investigate (at about 7 months, after 2 months of battling with it!), as we found out DD was allergic to egg and dairy, and within a couple weeks of me cutting those out of my diet, her eczema had completely cleared, and now we just get little flare ups with things like heat.
Cutting out food randomly can be very difficult, and because it takes 2-3 weeks for dairy (in particular) to get out of your system, that's quite a big committment for something that may not make any difference.
If you have health insurance, that should cover if you go privately, and otherwise you can ask to be referred onto the public waiting list. We have an awesome immunologist, so let me know if want any details (not sure if you're in Auckland?)
I'm sure that you may be able to manage things with creams etc (and one tip - best cream ever is 10% glycerine in cetomacrogol cream, although pharmacy has to make it up specially)..... but if it continues long term, I think it's worth finding the cause of it, rather than just treating the symptoms. Just my 2 cents!
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MamaT
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Posted: 30 November 2010 at 10:42am |
I've found that wheat triggers DS's eczema. I've have been wheat free now for about 3 months and he only gets a few flare ups in the heat.
I moisturise him with aqueous cream every day, only use aqueous cream for bathing, wash all clothes with laundry balls and use Lemnis fatty cream when/if we get bad patches.
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AzzaNZ
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Posted: 30 November 2010 at 1:52pm |
We're using Xma-Ease for our son's excema
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crafty1
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Posted: 30 November 2010 at 2:11pm |
mamaT - what are laundry balls?
I too am of the school that if you can figure it out then it will be so much easier. My dh is intolerant to wheat, dairy and as a child reacted to some fruits.
So we too are trying to figure it out but no luck yet. We know a lot of things it isn't so i guess we are getting there. I am unwilling to cut out dairy so that doesn't help, but he will be weaned soon so we can do it then. In the meantime we have ruled out wheat/gluten, banana, and most veges and meat are all ok. We are currently excluding egg, berries, kiwifruit and his skin is good so far.
What formula/milk do you ladies use if not cows milk? He will be 1 when we switch to bottle so it won't be his sole source of nutrients.
We use Aqueous cream in bath and hydrocortisone cream for flare ups.
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MamaT
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Posted: 30 November 2010 at 2:58pm |
Laundry Balls
There you go crafty
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yermasyada
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Posted: 30 November 2010 at 3:21pm |
QV Flare Up Bath Oil is amazing (for us) and we use the Hc for flare ups. Obviously moisturise frequently as well.
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Speck8
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Posted: 01 December 2010 at 9:41am |
My DS developed eczema ALL OVER his body and nothing could make it go away. Not moisturising ten times a day, not using hydrocortizone, nothing!!!!
Finally went and saw Dr. Williams in Mt Wellington who gave us a cream which cleared it right up within days - he now has beautiful skin!!!
Went to paediatrician at the hospital recently (just cos I had a referral and figured I'd may as well go) and he said not to bother with the skin prick tests as he said they might show my DS is allergic to eggs, I could cut out eggs but he might still get eczema. He reckons they're a waste of time.
That said, I might still get them done out of interest, but I do think the biggest test for food allergies is trial and error.
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blondy
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Posted: 01 December 2010 at 9:59am |
I too think the skin prick tests have a large margin of error, but the RAST blood test does not - it specifically shows how the immune system is reacting to different specific allergens, and hence may be the cause of the eczema  (For that reason, if you do go to a specialist, I'd recommend an immunologist over a dermatologist  ).
Hope your little boy is doing ok with this heat!? My eczema always got worse over the summer with the humidity
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londonbaby
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Posted: 01 December 2010 at 5:34pm |
Thanks for your replies everyone- I ended up taking him to the docs and she said he has mild exzema (didn't seem mild to me!) and told me they have been advised to stop using aqueous as a mosturizer, something in it is not safe to leave on babes skin anymore but it can still be used in the bath. So I stopped this and have just been using almond oil in the bath and Gaia mosturizer on his skin. Maybe the probiotic is also kicking in but his skin is LOADS better today! Pretty much normal with a few dry patches and a wee bit in his scalp. We are off to the naturopath on Monday so will be interesting to see what happens!!! I have also cut dairy out but am hoping he doesn't have a dairy allergy as he is soooooooo hungry at the mo I really wanted to start a formula top up at night...
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HuntersMama
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Posted: 02 December 2010 at 8:27pm |
If you dont get what you want from your GP, get a 2nd or even 3rd opinion. I was no happy with my GP saying that DS would grow out of his allergies and eczema. I saw a paed thru the public system - useless! We also saw a private specialist and Im happy with him. Just waiting on the blood test results now.
Xma-ease is really good, as is Aveeno moisturiser. We have got a bath oil called Oilatum which seems good - we have only been using it since Monday though.
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