What are the symptoms of eczema in babies

Symptoms of infantile eczema often begin to occur in the face and head of infants aged 2 to 3 months, and can also be scattered in other parts of the body, which can be categorized into exudative, dry and seborrheic types. Exudative type: at the beginning, it is a sharp red spot, distributed in the forehead and cheeks, and the boundary is not too obvious; later, dense small papules and blisters appear rapidly, and sometimes, there are scattered damages on the limbs or trunk. The affected area has severe itching. Dry type: the lesions are often dry. Or there are grayish-white bran-like thin flakes on the red spots, and thicker grayish-yellow scales on the head are braided together with the hair, and foul-smelling dirty liquid flows out from time to time. Seborrheic type: early damage is light red spots, a small amount of ooze, and later dry to form greasy scabs, often beginning to occur in the scalp and forehead and similar to seborrheic dermatitis. When your baby develops the above symptoms of eczema, it is recommended that you seek prompt medical attention for evaluation and management by a specialist.