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Impetigo

Impetigo. By: Kathryn Martin. Information. Basic Description. Impetigo is a superficial disease. This means that it is on the surface of skin. Most common in children and can affect skin with no visible breaks in it.

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Impetigo

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  1. Impetigo By: Kathryn Martin

  2. Information

  3. Basic Description • Impetigo is a superficial disease. This means that it is on the surface of skin. • Most common in children and can affect skin with no visible breaks in it. • It is contageous and can be spread through puss from an infected person touching your skin.

  4. Cause • Staphylococcus (staph) bacteria or streptococcus (strep) bacteria • Methicillin-resistant staph aureus (MRSA) is becoming a common cause. • The breaking of the barrier of skin. Some of these occurrences are animal bites, human bites, injury or trauma, or insect bites.

  5. Lesions from impetigo

  6. Symptoms • Puss filled blisters • Red base when popped • Easy to pop blisters • Itchy and yellow puss filled with crusty outsides • Skin lesions • Rashes that can spread with scratching • Swollen lymph nodes

  7. Treatment • Prescription antibiotic cream for mild rashes • Prescription antibiotics taken by mouth for more severe cases • Wash several times a day with antibacterial soap and warm water to remove the crust and puss from the lesions. • Can be diagnosed with a sample of the puss from the lesion.

  8. This is a man with untreated impetigo on his back, side, and arm.

  9. Not-So-Fun Facts • The sores heal slowly and rarely scar • The heal rate is very high • Usually reoccurs in children after treatment • Commonly occurs around the nose and mouth, hands and forearms, and in diaper areas on infants but can occur on any part of the body.

  10. Continued Facts • Any blister or rash that is scratched a lot can be turned into impetigo. • This includes poison ivy and poison oak along with other common skin diseases.

  11. Serious impetigo

  12. Complications • Can cause kidney failure but this is rare • It causes rashes in kids. • Can cause permanent damage to the skin. This is rare also. • The infection can spread to other parts of the body. This is very common.

  13. Prevention • Use a clean wash cloth and towel every time you clean • Do not share personal care items with anyone not even family • Use good hygiene and wash the lesions every day and wash your hands after touching a lesion.

  14. Pictures

  15. This is Amy Winehouse with Impetigo. • It is around her cheeks and bridge of her nose and chin.

  16. A child with Impetigo around the nose and mouth.

  17. Impetigo in the hairline and scalp of a person.

  18. Impetigo on an infants butt.

  19. Sources

  20. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmedhealth/PMH0001863/ • http://kidshealth.org/parent/infections/bacterial_viral/impetigo.html# • www.beauty-stuff.com/.../impetigo-in-adult2.jpg • http://doctorgrasshopper.files.wordpress.com/2010/06/impetigo.jpg • http://dermimages.med.jhmi.edu/images/bullous_impetigo_5_080322.jpg • http://www.aocd.org/skin/dermatologic_diseases/impetigo.html

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