A 3-year-old child has stomach pain, can’t defecate, coughs, and has blisters in the mouth. The symptoms started four days ago, and the child had been seen at a private veterinary hospital without success.
This is a question about a child crying and drooling with an eye sway, involving the issues of prematurity and hydrocephalus.
Frequent blinking and frowning in children may be a sign of tic disorder, requiring psychological and medication treatment.
A child’s eyes may squint and the nose twitch, possibly indicating a tic.
The child has been vomiting everything they eat since this morning, and injections and medication haven’t helped. What should I do?
Sneezing and crying in a child may be symptoms of a cold, usually accompanied by coughing, expectoration, and fever. A body temperature over 37 degrees is considered fever. You can take children’s paracetamol yellow amantadine granules, drink plenty of water, stay warm, and consider intravenous therapy if necessary.
If your baby hasn’t had a bowel movement for four days, it might be due to dry stools and inappropriate complementary feeding. It’s recommended to increase fluid intake and properly balance the diet to alleviate symptoms.
What could be the issue if my baby’s stool has blood strands?
My child is six months old, breastfeeding, and has several bowel movements a day, all green and runny with foam. What’s going on?
A 6-month-old baby exhibiting the behavior of biting things may be due to a zinc deficiency. It is recommended to increase nutrition and take the child to the hospital for a check-up.