T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
232.1 | could be | TLE::RANDALL | The Year of Hurricane Bonnie | Mon Jul 20 1992 16:27 | 4 |
| David got one of these on his stomach when he started pulling
himself around on the rug.
--bonnie
|
232.2 | Streptococcus? | RUTILE::CMCGRATH | | Tue Jul 21 1992 04:46 | 15 |
|
Well, by yesterday afternoon more of these dots had appeared all over
Sean. The doctor said it was a streptococcus (sp?) and gave us
medicine and salve to put over the dots....but this morning there
seemed to be more...spreading everywhere.
If anyone has seen this type of infection, please let me know what
to expect. Our doctor speaks fluent French and I only speak
high-school French so my ability to ask questions and get information
is limited...(although he tries really hard to help me out ;-) ).
Regards,
Carol
|
232.3 | some info | SUPER::WTHOMAS | | Tue Jul 21 1992 10:21 | 67 |
|
Hmmm, first of all let me make it very clear, I am not a Doctor.
However, I used to be a clinical microbiologist and if it were me,
I would question the diagnosis of Streptococcal infection based on your
description of the first sore and the additional spots coming out.
For the most part, there are two ways to get Strep. (which has a
few varieties, the A variety is most potent). You can either ingest the
organism (which leads to strep throat, strep mouth and nose infections
and which can lead to Scarlet fever and Rheumatic fever) or you can be
exposed to the bacteria by having an already existing wound (which
*could* be what your baby has, the skin became broken and the strep
entered that way). Ah, you can also get it sexually, but I'll leave
that discussion off for now.
Strep has a very potent toxin (one of the reasons strep throat
hurts so very much) and if it gets into the blood stream the toxin is
what causes the rash known as Scarlet fever.
As mentioned there are other types of Strep that are not as potent
and it is possible that your son is infected with one of those
varieties.
A few questions, (I'm not necessarily looking for answers here,
just things for you to consider) are the sores flat or are they "open"?
(A blood infection might cause flat rash sores while an exterior
infection would cause open, raw and very sore looking wounds.)
Does your child have a fever? (fevers go hand in hand with
infections)
Is he 'sick" (lethargic, whinney?) (an interior infection would
make him very sick)
Did they culture the wound by (I know this is gross) actually
inserting the culture probe into the pussy part of the wound (the only
verifiable way to culture for strep)?
Are the additional spots near the area of the first infection?
Are the spots forming in the shape of a "Christmas tree" on the
body (trunk, upper arms and upper thighs?)
The good news is that if it is strep (any variety), antibiotics
work very well and your baby should be showing signs of improvement in
roughly 48 hours.
If it is strep, you will have to try and identify the source (we
had some clients, whose children had repeat strep infections and it
turned out the family dog was the culprit).
In any event, keep your eye on Sean and if things are not improving
within a short time frame or if things are getting worse, you might
want to contact your physician again with an English/French dictionary
in tow.
Medical Science is difficult enough in English, I can't even
imagine trying to discuss it in another language.
There is also (somewhere dir/title=strep) a few discussions about
this in the Medical notes file that you might want to check out.
Wendy
|
232.4 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | | Tue Jul 21 1992 10:56 | 18 |
| We saw a similar kind of problem occur with a fungal infection like ringworm.
Lots of tiny pin head spots growing in rings almost as described up to a
diameter of about 3" and then started again, so the effect was almost like
a bullseye. After the second ring (they aren't really well defined rings,
but it's the easiest description) it spread all over the general area.
Treatment was with a topical antifungal like clotrimazole (Canesten) in
combination with a topical antibiotic.
The spot started on the back of the legs where our daughter kept moving her
legs back and forth on the carpet. Apparently, there are a lot of potential
fungii in our carpets that normally aren't a problem, but the skin abrasion
opened the skin sufficiently for an infection to start.
Strangely, that spot kept having flare ups of the same thing for many years.
I guess the spores laid dormant in the skin there for years!
Stuart
|
232.5 | | ROCKS::LMCDONALD | | Tue Jul 21 1992 12:46 | 11 |
| From you description in .0 I would have said it is ringworm (which is
really a fungal infection) and as the previous note stated a topical
fungicide will clear it up in 10-14 days. I got it from one of my cats
and had no problem clearing it up on either of us.
I've never heard of ringworm spreading so fast though. Good luck.
Maybe you could find someone fluent in English and French to translate
for you next time you see the Doc.
LaDonna
|
232.6 | Well it is getting better | RUTILE::CMCGRATH | | Thu Jul 23 1992 04:06 | 10 |
| Well the rash seems to be 'contained'. It has stopped spreading and
some of the red spots seem to be going away. It is just the largest
sore which will take some time to heal.
Thanks for the help. I tend to agree that it is a fungal infection
and think I probably didn't hear what the doctor said correctly!
Cheers,
Carol
|
232.7 | Rash returns. | RUTILE::CMCGRATH | | Thu Aug 13 1992 06:45 | 17 |
|
Sean's rash has reappeared in a different place now. The doctor had a
blood test done to see if his iron was low. He said a low iron count
could be a reason why the infection keeps coming back (??). His iron
was low and he is on a supplement for six weeks. The rash stopped
spreading as soon as he was put back on the medicine from before and it
is clearing up again. I am just curious as to why it might keep coming
back.
Any more thoughts on this?
Cheers,
Carol
|
232.8 | iron deficiency does reduce resistance | TLE::RANDALL | The Year of Hurricane Bonnie | Thu Aug 13 1992 15:17 | 6 |
| Low iron will reduce your body's ability to produce antibodies.
I can tell when I need to start iron supplements because I start
sleeping poorly, and then I start catching every cold that goes
around...
--bonnie
|
232.9 | | IMTDEV::COOP | | Fri Mar 26 1993 16:54 | 9 |
| Re: Rashes from Crawling
My daughter has just started dragging herself around the living
room. She is getting rugburn on her arms and knees. I have been
just putting lotion on them every night before she goes to bed.
It has been warm the past couple of days, and she is now wearing
"short" suits. Do they make baby knee pads? :-) Is there anything
I can do to "lessen" the rug burn?
|
232.10 | | DV780::DORO | | Fri Mar 26 1993 17:46 | 8 |
|
Yes, they *do* make baby knees pads. I believe I've seen them in the
"right start" catalog.
A really good lotion helps too. My pedi recommended "Kiss my face"
lotion for the same problem.
Jamd
|
232.11 | | GOOEY::ROLLMAN | | Mon Mar 29 1993 11:10 | 9 |
|
Get some sweat bands from the drugstore or sporting goods store. They cost
maybe $2.00 US and will fit a crawlers knees perfectly. We used them for
a couple months to hold Elise's pants off her feet when she first started
walking.
Pat
|