| Literature DB >> 25935520 |
Teresa Løvold Berents1,2, Jørgen Rønnevig3,4, Elisabeth Søyland5, Peter Gaustad6,7, Gro Nylander8, Beate Fossum Løland9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Public health nurses report on effects of fresh human milk as treatment for conjunctivitis, rhinitis and atopic eczema (AE), the latter being highly prevalent in early childhood. Emollients and topical corticosteroids are first line treatment of AE. As many caregivers have steroid phobia, alternative treatment options for mild AE are of interest. The aim of this small pilot study was to assess the potential effects and risks of applying fresh human milk locally on eczema spots in children with AE.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25935520 PMCID: PMC4424556 DOI: 10.1186/s12895-015-0027-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Dermatol ISSN: 1471-5945
Figure 1Flow diagram. Nine children with atopic eczema and bilateral eczema lesions were assessed for eligibility to a small split body, controlled, physician blinded pilot study evaluating human milk and emollient versus emollient alone on eczema lesions. Three children were lost to follow up.
Figure 2Change in eczema area. This figure illustrates the weekly difference between control and intervention sites based on the area change from baseline in six children with atopic eczema included in a split body, controlled, physician blinded pilot study evaluating human milk and emollient versus emollient alone on eczema lesions. Each line represents one child. The difference is calculated as: control area week 1, 2, 3 or 4 divided by control area at week 0 minus intervention area week 1, 2, 3 or 4 divided by intervention area at week 0. Lines above zero represent improvement of the intervention area, and lines below zero represent the relative increase of the eczema areas of the intervention sites.
Bacteria in eczema spots and human milk
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|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 0 | No | No growth | No growth | Skin flora1 |
| 1 | No | No growth | No growth | Missing | |
| 2 | No | No growth | Skin flora | Missing | |
| 3 | No | Gram negative rods | Gram negative rods | Skin flora | |
| 4 | No | Skin flora | No growth | Skin flora | |
| 2 | 0 | No | Skin flora | Skin flora | Skin flora |
| 1 | No | Skin flora | Skin flora | Skin flora | |
| 2 | No | Skin flora | Skin flora | Skin flora | |
| 3 | No | Skin flora | Skin flora | Skin flora | |
| 4 | No | No growth | No growth | Skin flora | |
| 5 | 0 | No |
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| Skin flora |
| 1 | No |
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| |
| 2 | Yes |
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| Skin flora | |
| 3 | No |
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| Skin flora | |
| 4 | Yes |
| Skin flora | Skin flora | |
| 7 | 0 | No | Skin flora | Skin flora | Skin flora |
| 1 | Yes | Skin flora | Skin flora | CNS4 | |
| 2 | No |
| Skin flora | Skin flora | |
| 3 | No | Skin flora | Skin flora | Skin flora | |
| 4 | No |
| Skin flora | Skin flora | |
| 8 | 0 | No | Missing | Missing | Missing |
| 1 | No | Skin flora | Skin flora | Skin flora | |
| 2 | No | Skin flora | Skin flora | Skin flora | |
| 3 | No |
| Skin flora | Skin flora | |
| 4 | No | Skin flora | Skin flora | Skin flora | |
| 9 | 0 | No |
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| Skin flora |
| 1 | Yes |
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| 2 | No |
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| No growth | |
| 3 | Yes |
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| Skin flora |
1Skin flora: non-pathogen bacteria belonging to the skin flora 2 mod.: moderate, 3col. colonies, 4CNS: coagulase negative staphylococci, 5AHST alfa haemolytic streptococci.
Bacterial presence in samples taken from eczema spots and human milk weekly, and the presence of clinically judged infection in control and intervention sites of six children with atopic eczema included in a split body, controlled, physician blinded pilot study evaluating human milk and emollient versus emollient alone on eczema lesions.