Based on your description, your baby does not appear to be suffering from hand, foot, and mouth disease. Hand, foot, and mouth disease is primarily caused by enteroviruses, leading to rashes or blisters on the mouth, hands, feet, and even the entire body, with or without fever. Given your baby’s current condition, hand, foot, and mouth disease is not considered, but close observation of your baby’s mouth for any appearance of rashes and the presence of fever is necessary.
Red pustules have appeared on my baby’s face, a few on the forehead and now also on the cheeks. The highest temperature was 37.6°C, usually around 37.2°C. There are also a few on the hands. What could this be?
The red spots on the baby’s palm may be due to allergies or other irritants, not symptoms of hand, foot, and mouth disease.
Redness and bubbles in a child’s throat may be inflammation caused by a cold, but not hand, foot, and mouth disease. It is recommended to take the child to the hospital for a check-up and to receive treatment under a doctor’s guidance.
Inquire about the severity of jaundice and vomiting in newborns, as well as possible causes and treatment methods.
Inquiring whether the small, soft depression about 3 centimeters in diameter on a newborn’s back of the head is a normal condition.
A sudden redness around an 8-month-old baby’s navel may be a common symptom caused by a fire toxicity.
The test result of a newborn’s stool in diapers after 40 minutes may have errors due to the evaporation of stool moisture.
After walking a lot, the child experiences thigh pain and is unable to squat, which improves with rest. Could it be growth pains?
Worrying about whether the white spots on your baby’s back are vitiligo, it is necessary to observe the characteristics of the white spots and seek dermatological diagnosis.