How is stubborn thrush treated?

  Local medication: It is relatively easy to treat thrush, and it can be treated with mycobacterium powdered and mixed with cod liver oil drops and applied to the wound surface once every 4 hours. Local medication for thrush is easy to treat, and can be made into a powder and cod liver oil drops, applied to the wound surface, once every 4 hours, with significant effect.  Systemic medication: Children with severe symptoms can also take some oral antifungal medication, such as mycophenolate or clotrimazole, for comprehensive treatment. Systemic medication: Children with severe symptoms can also take some oral antifungal medications, such as myclobutanil or clotrimazole, for comprehensive treatment. Dietary hygiene: Keep the tableware and food clean, use bottles, nipples, bowls and spoons exclusively, wash them with alkaline water after use, and disinfect them by boiling. For breastfeeding, the mother should wash her hands and clean the nipples before each feeding. Nutrition: Choose foods that are easily digested and absorbed and rich in high quality protein, and increase the supply of vitamins B and C, such as animal liver, lean meat, fish, and fresh vegetables and fruits. It is important to pay attention to the isolation and disinfection of breastfeeding in the infant room to prevent the spread of thrush. Thrush is mostly seen in newborns and children with chronic diarrhea and malnutrition, or children with long-term use of antibiotics, adrenal glands, and corticosteroids. children with corticosteroids, and unhygienic nipples and eating utensils that allow mold to invade the oral mucosa. These children generally have poor body resistance, and if the oral care is not proper, Candida albicans can easily invade and multiply. White dots or flakes of membrane-like material can be seen on both sides of the buccal mucosa, tongue, face, gums, and palate, which cannot be easily swabbed away and forcibly removed, and red trauma without bleeding can be seen below them. In children with severe thrush, the oral cavity is like layers of white snowflakes, congesting the throat and affecting breathing, and the child is irritable and refuses to eat.