Neonatal rashes: Difference between revisions
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==[[Seborrheic Dermatitis]]== | ==[[Seborrheic Dermatitis]]== | ||
==[[Atopic Dermatitis]]== | ==[[Atopic Dermatitis]]== | ||
*Must distinguish from seborrheic dermatitis | *Must distinguish from seborrheic dermatitis | ||
Revision as of 22:39, 11 June 2012
Erythema Toxicum
Neonatal Acne
Seborrheic Dermatitis
Atopic Dermatitis
- Must distinguish from seborrheic dermatitis
- Occurs between 2-6mo (somewhat later than seborrheic dermatitis)
- Pruritic (may manifest as fussiness) vs seborrheic (not pruritic)
- Dry skin, erythematous papular lesions
- Face most commonly involved; nose and diaper areas spared
- DDX
- Seborrheic dermatitis, scabies
- Treatment
- Identify and eliminate triggers
- Reduce drying of skin
- Liberal application of emollients (vaseline)
Diaper Dermatitis
- Contact dermatitis VS candidal dermatitis
- Contact dermatitis
- Erythematous, macular or papular, w/ well demarcated borders
- Treatment
- Good hygiene, air drying, use of barrier creams (zinc oxide)
- Candidal dermatitis
- Erythematous w/ papular and pustular lesions and scaling around margins
- Classic finding is "satellite lesions"
- Must examine for oral thrush
- If present: Oral nystatin 2mL QID infants, 4-6mL QID children
- Administer for up to 2d after resolution of oral lesions
- If present: Oral nystatin 2mL QID infants, 4-6mL QID children
- Treatment
- Nystatin cream 100K U/gram TID x10-14d
- If use zinc oxide must apply after nystatin
- Hydrocortisone 1-2% after nystatin, before zinc oxide, may be used for severe lesions
