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Alpha Health Education
From the Book of Skin
Introduction
to Eczema
Eczema
in Infants
Eczema
In Children
Eczema
as Food Allergy
Food Allergy Center
Skin Center
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Eczema is a descriptive term that refers to itchy, red,
thickening and scaling skin eruptions. Dermatology texts will list a number of conditions
under the term eczema and the classification can be confusing. Itching is the dominant
symptom and can be severe.
Atopic dermatitis is the prototype of food allergic
skin disease. This type of eczema often appears on the face as patches of
reddish, scaling skin. As eczema worsens, the skin becomes itchier, red,
thickened, grooved, and may blister, weep, and crack. The typical
distribution of eczema is on the face, behind the ears, on the front of the
elbows, the back of the knees, the hands, neck, and trunk.
We find it helpful to think in terms
of the origin of the problem and classify eczema in a simple way; the skin
condition is either allergic (immune -mediated) or something else is going
on. If allergic, the triggers are either food or surface contact materials
or both. Food allergy probably accounts for much eczema; the rest is
external allergy-irritants, infection, and injury to the skin through
vigorous itching.
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The
Cure
Eczema Rescue
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The Solution Alpha Nutrition Diet Revision
Complete diet revision is essential to solve the problems of eczema, and
chronic urticaria since many food antigens and food borne chemicals may be involved. There
is no reliable test to identify them.
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To solve eczema, consider doing the slow track on the Alpha Nutrition Program
with the option of supportive
medication for the first few weeks of recovery - antihistamines and optional prednisone if
the problem is bad enough.
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If the eczema triggers were in the food supply, the skin inflammation should diminish
and then disappear.
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Slow food reintroduction is then required to screen returning foods for allergic
activity.
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