Eczema Risk Factors, Prevention and Wellness Tips, Biomedica Laboratories
Eczema wellness tips and risk factors from Biomedica
Laboratories. How to prevent and treat skin inflammation and itching, (Eczema
or Atopic dermatitis), with diet and nutrition, exercise, stress reduction,
dietary supplements and natural or alternative medicine. Recovery, Biostructural
Medicine for dermatitis, eczema and psoriasis
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Eczema
Risk Factors, Prevention and Wellness Tips
ECZEMA CAUSES AND RISK FACTORS
Atopic eczema is believed to be a hereditary condition,
being genetically linked. It has been suggested that people
who develop eczema are abnormally sensitive to certain allergens.
These allergens cause the immune system to overreact, causing
inflamed, irritated and sore skin. (This explains why people
with severe atopic dermatitis frequently also suffer from
hay fever or asthma.)
Such as is the case with psoriasis,
digestive problems (inflammatory bowel diseases such as crohn's
disease, ulcerative colitis and diverticulitis) may precede
eczema; this could be due to abnormal absorption, into the
bloodstream, of foreign compounds from the digestive tract.
Foreign compounds within the bloodstream provoke immune hypersensitivity
and can affect the skin in many negative ways.
WELLNESS TIPS
- Use an air-purification system to filter out particles
in the air that may initiate inflammatory skin reactions.
Make sure the air purifier is cleaned and/or replaced often.
- Use a humidifier in the home to help prevent skin from
drying out.
- Take brief, daily baths or showers using lukewarm water.
Use a gentle soap (or no soap at all). Pat affected skin
dry with a towel and immediately apply an emollient, perfume-free
moisturizer.
- Try an oatmeal bath. Natural pharmacies often sell colloidal
oatmeal bath treatments. A cup of baking soda in your bath
water can also bring relief. There are also other natural
creams that can help to alleviate the irritation
- Apply calamine lotion. A thin layer of calamine can help
stop persistent itching.
- Avoid contact with irritants or allergens that may cause
problems. (If you have hay fever, for example, cover your
arms and wear gardening gloves when doing yard work.)
- Ask your doctor, or other health care provider, about
hydrocortisone creams and mild antihistamines to relieve
itching.
- Cut nails short and wear gloves at night to avoid scratching.
- Avoid wool and acrylic fabrics next to the skin.
- Avoid using harsh chemical cleaners that may irritate
the skin (e.g. bleaches, abrasive scrubs, etc.). Look for
more natural solutions.
- Add more raw seeds such as pumpkin and flax seeds and
fatty fish like salmon or sardines to your food intake;
these foods contain health promoting omega 3 fatty acids,
to help reduce skin inflammation.
- Ask your doctor / healthcare professional about Recovery®
with Nutricol®, a food-based non-drug supplement formulated
to help improve quality of life*.
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