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eczema inflammation of the skin, usually causing itchiness and sometimes blisters and scaling; may be caused by allergies, but often occurs for no apparent reason
Ãâó: www.american-depot.com/services/resources_gl_e.asp
eczema Non-contagious disease of the skin characterized by redness, itching, scaling and lesions with discharge. Frequently becomes encrusted. Eczema primarily affects young children. The underlying cause is usually an allergy to many things, including foods, wool, skin lotions. The disorder may begin in month-old babies. It usually subisdes by age 3 but may flare again at age 10 to 12 and last through puberty.
Ãâó: www.bdid.com/termse.htm
eczema A smarting eruption of small pustules, generally crowded together, without fever, and not contagious. [Thomas1875] A noncontagious inflammation of the skin, characterized chiefly by redness, itching, and the outbreak of lesions that may discharge serous matter and become encrusted and scaly. [Dorland]
Ãâó: www.antiquusmorbus.com/English/EnglishE.htm
eczema acute or chronic inflammatory condition of the skin with itching, burning, discoloration, elevation pustules, scales, crusts, and/or scabs; can be weeping (wet) or dry
Ãâó: www.lovingscents.com/Glossary.htm
eczema A disorder of the skin like psoriasis and also considered to be related to malfunctions of the immune system. Symptoms include red, itchy skin and sores that ooze and crust over. One out of ten children develops eczema, but more than half of them lose it by the time they reach their teens.
Ãâó: www.ecohealth101.org/glossary.html
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