Atopic eczema



Atopic eczema (atopic dermatitis) is a chronic inflammatory skin condition. It is common in childhood affecting about 10% of school-aged children. Moderately severe eczema is miserable for the whole family. Itch and sleep deprivation are the main complaints. Topical treatment is messy and time consuming. Many parents who end up bringing their child to the ED will be exhausted and fed up. It is important that they get consistent, clear messages about treatment. Flares are common, and sometimes there will be a treatable exacerbating factor such as infection.


Acute management

One of the commonest reasons for acute flare up is secondary infection. This is almost always with staphylococcus aureus.

Bacterial infection

Viral infection

Taking viral samples: Need a viral testing kit: if not in ED obtain one from the lab EM gives rapid results- smear the glass slide over ruptured vesicles and send urgently to virology.


Long Term Management

Staying with simple treatments that you know well and spending time explaining and encouraging correct usage is often more effective than using yet another different preparation.

Basic Elements

Soap substitutes

Emollient (moisturiser)

  • Less greasy emollients:
    • Diprobase cream 500gl pump dispenser
    • Doublebase 500g pump dispenser
  • Greasy emollients
    • Epaderm 500g tub
    • 50/50 WSP/LP 500g tub

Topical Steroids

Bandaging

Bandages are a useful adjunct to treatment. They improve the penetration of topical treatments into the skin, feel soothing, provide a barrier to scratching and prevent emollient making clothes greasy. Bandages can be used over night or continuously changing the bandages once or twice in a 24-hour period:

Dry – Tubular bandage

Wet- wet wrapping technique puts damp layer of bandages under dry layer

Paste- impregnated (sticky) bandages under tubular bandages- “Viscopaste”(zinc oxide) or “Icthopaste” (zinc oxide and icthammol)

Prescribing bandages

Elasticated viscose stockinette (Tubifast, Coverflex or equivalent) to fit trunk or limbs (width ranges in size from in red stripe which fits an infant’s arm through blue, green and yellow stripe which fits a larger child’s trunk) in 10 metre lengths.

Tubifast garments can also be prescribed (vest, leggings, socks).

Paste bandages come in boxes of 12 rolls -each roll will provide one application to 4 limbs of a small child.

Patients/carers need to be shown how to bandage properly. Contact outpatient nurses in working hours to arrange this.

Anti-histamines

Antihistamines may be useful at night for sedating effect:

Piriton, Vallergan, Phenergan

Use a decent, sedative dose at bedtime. The child may get tolerant of the sedative effect, so intermittent use when most needed makes sense.


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