The child’s persistent fever has lasted for over ten days. After examination, it was diagnosed as mycoplasma infection. The child is currently undergoing traditional Chinese medicine treatment and enema, but still has fever and cough symptoms.
Understand the causes and treatment suggestions for a 8-year-old child’s persistent fever.
A child is experiencing redness in the corners of their eyes, dry stool, and now fever. Parents inquire about the appropriate dosage of a Qingyi granule.
The child has stomach bloating and dry vomiting with lymph node inflammation. After taking medication for four days, how can you confirm a complete recovery? Should you finish the six-day prescription? There’s also a bit of coughing, not severe, just occasional. What should you do?
The child’s stool contains blood strands, and a medical examination confirms gastrointestinal inflammation. Parents inquire about the need for a chest X-ray and treatment methods.
Child’s stool appears greenish-white, watery, and bean curd-like with no increase in frequency and medication being ineffective. Seeking professional advice.
If a child’s throat has pus patches, it might be tonsillitis. Treatment primarily involves antibiotics, with options including intravenous injections or oral antibiotics. Additionally, a natural remedy called the lantern flower can be brewed into a drink for good results.
My child has been feverish for 4 days, with intermittent high fever, clear nasal discharge, and slight cough. The doctor diagnosed it as viral influenza. Upon returning home late at night, I noticed 4 blisters on my child’s tongue tip, which were only 2 blisters two days ago. Today, the doctor only examined the throat and not the tongue, and I forgot to ask. So I want to ask if blood tests at the fingertips can detect hand, foot, and mouth disease, and whether tongue blisters are a symptom of hand, foot, and mouth disease.
A child experienced shaking hands after a cold, with normal hospital checks. Inquiry about possible causes and solutions.
Childhood diabetes is a chronic endocrine metabolic disease caused by insulin deficiency, leading to metabolic disorders of sugar, fat, protein, water, and electrolytes. It is characterized by symptoms such as polyuria, polydipsia, emaciation, and susceptibility to infections. It requires dietary control, infection prevention, and insulin therapy.