lcp
We have detected you are using Internet Explorer. To provide the best and most secure experience, please use a modern browser as we do not support Internet Explorer.
Blog post branding logo

Facial eczema in an infant - Clinical Opal

18 March 2024 - Quality Use of Medicines Alliance

Emily is a 6-month-old child who presents with red, papular, excoriated patches on her cheeks and around her mouth.

Her father, Craig, says a mild rash has been there ‘for a while’ but started to look a lot ‘angrier’ about three weeks ago. He tells you that Emily has also started to scratch a lot, and has drawn blood a few times in her sleep, so they now put mittens on her hands.

Craig took over parental care about 4 weeks ago. He gives Emily formula during the day and she is also trying a small amount of pureed fruit and vegetables. Emily is still breast-fed morning and night. He and Emily’s mother wonder if she could have a food or formula allergy. 

On examination, you note an erythematous rash showing typical distribution for facial eczema, including lighter erythema along the hairline. The skin around the cheeks is dry, excoriated and crusted. There is no active weeping from lesions or signs of infection. You can see the top of her left lower central incisor has broken through the gum. You learn that Emily’s mother had eczema when she was a child, but ‘grew’ out of it. Using a scoring tool (e.g. vIGA-AD), you determine that Emily has moderately severe facial eczema.

What treatment do you recommend, and how do you address the parental concerns regarding food allergies contributing to the baby’s eczema?


Eczema (atopic dermatitis) is a common, chronic inflammatory skin condition that often starts in infancy.

While there is no cure, most cases can be controlled with regular and appropriate foundational care, which includes moisturising every day and avoiding triggers.

Given the moderate severity of Emily’s eczema, it would be appropriate to prescribe methylprednisolone aceponate 0.1% cream, to be generously applied to all affected areas, once daily for no more than 7 days. If eczema has not cleared, step down to hydrocortisone 1% or consider a topical calcineurin inhibitor until the skin is smooth and itch-free.

Provide Craig with an eczema care plan that includes written guidance for both parents to follow and a review date. If time permits include a demonstration of how to correctly apply topical treatments, or have Craig ask the pharmacist to demonstrate.

Include a discussion on bathing, daily moisturising and reduction of likely triggers. Dribbling associated with teething is also likely to irritate surrounding skin. Keeping the area well moisturised with a greasy barrier (e.g. Vaseline) before and after feeding should help. Clean her mouth using a soft wet towel (avoid wipes containing fragrance or preservatives such as MCI/MI). Some foods (e.g. citrus fruits, strawberries, tomatoes, tomato-based sauces) also irritate the skin around the mouth—this is not a food allergy.

Most food allergies cause symptoms (e.g. hives, vomiting and irritability) within 30 minutes of consumption. Only occasionally do they result in delayed eczema flare-ups. Modifying diet (i.e. restricting diet, changing formula) has little benefit. Elimination diets in children who do not have a confirmed food allergy can cause malnutrition and poor growth and result in the development of new food allergies. 

Skin prick or RAST tests do not predict foods that trigger eczema and should only be undertaken if recommended and interpreted by a clinical immunology/allergy specialist.

Some evidence suggests that managing eczema well during infancy may reduce the chance of an infant developing food allergy. 

More on the quality use of medicines 

QHUB is Medcast's new dedicated platform for education and resources that support safe and appropriate use of medicines. 

Click the logo to find out more!

Related courses

The Eczema Equation: Burden of disease and challenges in management (webinar)

Virtual Educational Visiting

QUM alliance

References

Atopic dermatitis (published August 2022). In: Therapeutic Guidelines. Melbourne: Therapeutic Guidelines Limited. Accessed 28 Sep 2023. https://www.tg.org.au

Australasian College of Dermatologists. Consensus statement: Topical corticosteroids in paediatric eczema. 2022. https://www.dermcoll.edu.au/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/ACD-Consensus-Statement-Topical-Corticosteroids-September-2022-.pdf

The Royal Children's Hospital Melbourne. Eczema: Clinical Practice Guidelines. https://www.rch.org.au/clinicalguide/guideline_index/eczema/

Eczema and food allergy - fast facts [Internet]. Australasian Society of Clinical Immunology and Allergy. 2024. https://www.allergy.org.au/patients/fast-facts/eczema-and-food-allergy

Quality Use of Medicines Alliance
Quality Use of Medicines Alliance

The Quality Use of Medicines Alliance a consortium of eight health and consumer organisations, will align their work across the two grants, awarded under the Australian Government’s Quality Use of Diagnostics, Therapeutics and Pathology (QUDTP) Program.  

FOLLOW QHUB

Receive QHUB updates to your inbox.

Or follow us on social media

Related Tags
Related Categories
Latest News
My patients are concerned about the safety of topical corticosteroids – should they be?
Brand icon

Stories about topical steroid withdrawal are difficult to put into context for both consumers and health professionals. The outcome is that many consumers are avoiding using topical corticosteroids, which in many cases, makes it harder to manage conditions such as eczema.

5 mins READ
Obstetric Emergencies, can you help Lauren?

You are working in ED and have received a call from Pathology regarding blood results that you took earlier on Lauren, who is 18 years old and 30 weeks pregnant with her first child. Discover the diagnosis behind Lauren's abnormal blood results and learn the symptoms, risks, and management of this life-threatening obstetric emergency.

5 mins READ
Navigating the Eczema Journey
Brand icon

Jaime has suffered from severe eczema for most of his life. This podcast delves into the interactions that take place between consumers and health professionals in the eczema journey. 

36 mins READ