The first months of your new baby’s life are going fine.
He or she has amazingly soft skin. You’re using baby soaps and washing their
clothes with gentle laundry detergent. But as soon as winter arrives with cold
temperatures and dry air, you notice scaly, rough patches on their skin
followed by broken-down spots that ooze icky stuff and develop crusty scabs.
That’s exactly what happened to us and our little guy. He
was born in October, and by the end of December he had what our pediatrician
called “one of the worst cases of baby eczema he had ever seen”. His once-soft
infant skin was dry and scaly, with rough patches on his tummy and back. There
were a couple spots, especially around his shoulder blades, that were red and
oozing fluid which just irritated his skin even more and developed scabs (we
later learned these are called “plaques”). He also had a rough, red chin and
patches on his face for weeks during his worst breakouts.
He would cry himself to sleep because he was so itchy. When
we snuggled him he would scratch his red face on our clothes by moving his head
back and forth. We went to the pediatrician multiple times and tried many
different solutions. We tested almost every piece of advice we got from our
network of family, friends and online forums. Rinsing laundry with vinegar. Using
the extra rinse feature. All-cotton clothes. Coconut oil. Two pairs of pajamas
with the inside pair being slightly damp. Moisturizing soaps (like Dove bar
soap and Cetaphil cleanser). A whole cupboard full of baby lotions like Aveeno,
Aquaphor, Cerave and SkinFix. Increasingly powerful steroid creams ranging from
over-the-counter anti-itch cream to a medium-potency cream that our pharmacist
said had no guidelines for baby use. Two different antibiotics. Probiotics. Antifungal
and antibacterial creams. Oatmeal baths. Bleach baths. Dermatitis shampoo. Oral
antihistamines (Claritin). And finally… Vaniply.
After months our son having more or less the same symptoms we finally were able to see a pediatric dermatologist at a major regional
hospital. The dermatologist took a brief look at our son and gave us two pieces
of advice. First was to throw away all of his pacifiers to clear up his face
eczema. And second was to slather him up with a greasy ointment once a day from
head to toe. He recommended Vaniply as his favorite product, but said petroleum
jelly, Aquaphor or other very greasy ointments would probably work just as
well. He also explained that instead of all the steroid creams we were using, we should switch to a steroid ointment instead, because the ointment
works better for the worst eczema areas.
Check out my related post Tips & Advice That Work For Baby Eczema to learn more about what worked and what didn't work for our son. Have you had an experience with Vaniply for eczema or another use? Let me know in the comments!
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