Dealing With Adult Eczema
Eczema afflicts an average of fifteen million Americans each year. One of the best ways to manage adult eczema is to keep your skin as well-hydrated as possible. This means regularly moisturizing your skin twice daily or more, if necessary. Ideally you should use emollient oil in the bath or shower and apply a soothing moisturizing lotion or cream to your skin when it is still damp from your shower. Moisturizing creams or ointments are best for eczema prone skin, lotions are not as ideal as they are water-based. Good choices soap or cleanser choices for bathing are Cetaphil, Neutrogena, or Dove. Excellent moisturizer choices include Curel, Emu Oil, Vaseline, Alpha Keri, Lubriderm and Aquaphor.
When itching it at its most severe, turn to a variety of ointments to help manage the flare-up, and give you relief from your symptoms. For mild eczema cases, try an anti-itch cream such as Pramoxine or Doxepin. Keep in mind though that these creams work best when there is only a small area of affected skin. At times, patients with eczema are prescribed corticosteroid steroid creams for their itching. One of the best-known brands is Glucocorticoid. Mild to moderate cases of eczema have been successfully treated with Desonide or Hydrocortisone, while the most severe cases call for the extremely potent steroid cream, Clobetasol Propionate. It is important to discuss the steroid cream's potential side effects with your doctor before starting to use one. Steroid creams cannot be used continually as there is a risk of thinning of the skin and causing premature aging. Instead, they prescribe using them for one week, followed by a few weeks off and repeated as necessary.
Topical immunomodulators are ointments prescribed to eczema sufferers that have gotten much touting in the fight against eczema symptoms. So far they are proving to be extremely successful. The three most popular brands include Dougan and Elidel, which are pimecrolimus, and ProTopic which is a tacrolimus. Topical immunomodulators are effective by suppressing the immune system at the site of the skin condition.