Understand the risk of re-infection with hand, foot, and mouth disease, and how to prevent your baby from getting infected again.
A newborn is diagnosed with polycystic kidney disease, and parents are concerned whether the same condition will be inherited by the next generation.
Discuss the concerns of parents regarding potential developmental impacts on their baby after undergoing pyloric stenosis surgery, along with corresponding care recommendations.
Traditional beliefs suggest that a child’s fever can burn the brain, but in reality, only diseases like encephalitis and meningitis can cause damage to the brain tissue. According to statistics, body temperature during fever rarely exceeds 41°C. If it does, the possibility of bacterial meningitis or sepsis is higher. The maximum temperature brain cells can tolerate may be as high as 41.7°C.
If a newborn’s head shape is flattened due to sleeping, it can be adjusted by changing the sleeping position.
If a baby has a cyst inside the lower lip, surgery to treat it may affect the appearance of the lips.
Hand, Foot, and Mouth Disease is a special infection caused by a virus, characterized by vesicular rashes on the mouth, hands, feet, knees, and buttocks. Most children become irritable, lose their appetite, and have a fever. Children who have had hand, foot, and mouth disease may get infected again. Pay attention to hygiene in everyday life.
Will a child who started steroid treatment for kidney disease at two and a half years old develop cataracts?
Will a child’s asthma recur after recovery?
Explore the possibility of gene mutation in children and how to avoid deafness caused by drug poisoning.