What Diseases Can Be Detected from the Fundus?

Diseases that can be diagnosed through fundus examination include trachoma, anemia, chalazion, keratitis, and more. In addition to medication treatment for pediatric fundus diseases, patients should consult experts for advice, maintain communication with doctors, and pay attention to nursing aspects such as daily light diet and frequent outdoor exercise. At the same time, patients should also pay attention to choosing a reputable hospital for treatment to ensure good therapeutic outcomes.
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What to Do When a Child Has Low Platelets?

A four-year-old boy suffering from viral influenza had a persistent fever for four days. However, the fever kept recurring, and after a blood test at the hospital, it was discovered that his platelet count had dropped to 53 (normal range is 100-300), with a CRP of 11 and a reticulocyte count of 0.4. The platelet count has not yet recovered. Should artificial intervention be used to prevent chronicization or medication be taken? This will be known after the blood test. The most common platelet-reducing disease in children is idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura, an unexplained blood system disease often related to the immune system. It is recommended that you take your child to a local regular hospital for a bone marrow biopsy first for diagnosis before treatment!
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What’s Happening with My 7-Month-Old Baby’s Nighttime Cough and Fever?

My 7-month-old baby doesn’t cough during the day, but has been coughing occasionally at night for a week. Suddenly, she threw up twice yesterday and had a fever this morning. We don’t have a runny nose or stuffy nose. Her highest temperature was 38.6 degrees Celsius. We went to the hospital, where the doctor listened and said it was just a cold. We were given two medications, and after taking them, she had diarrhea at night, watery stools, twice! I’m not sure if her fever is due to indigestion or if she’s about to have roseola. What’s going on?
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