The skin, as the largest organ of the human body, always protects our bodies from external aggression. However, it is also often exposed to the risk of infection, and knowledge about skin infections can help us to better care for skin health.
1. Understanding the “causes” of skin infections 1. Microbiological intrusion: Bacteria, fungi and viruses are the three main “probators” of skin infections. The blubber is a common pathogenic bacteria, which is widespread in the environment, and when the skin is damaged, such as scratches, bruises, even small wounds, it takes advantage of the vandalization, local breeding, release of toxins, inflammation, in the form of swelling, heat and even septification. Skin fungus in fungi prefers warm, wet environments, such as feet, which provide a hotbed for fungi breeding due to sweating in their feet and inflating their shoes, and which erodes skin horny layers, resulting in skin rinsing, itching and watering. The virus, like the simple herpes virus, is often activated when human immunity is reduced and the skin mucous membranes are attacked, causing saplings and visible pain. 2. Damage to the skin barrier: Excessive cleaning, use of irritating skins or frequent decorns can damage the natural oily and horny layers of the skin surface and reduce their defence function. The long-term drying environment, with severe loss of skin moisture and the risk of cracking, opens the “port of convenience” for micro-organisms. In addition, chronic diseases such as diabetes, such as poor blood sugar control, can affect skin microvascular cycles, resulting in inadequate nutrition and reduced resistance to skin and high vulnerability to infection.
b. Bacteria-skin infections are more typical of insinuation, irritation at the base is evident, swelling and increasing pain, and subsequent vertebrates are softened and excreted; irritation is acute sepsis of multiple adjoining cysts and their adhesive gland or sweaty glands, with a wider range of red and edible fevers, with all-body symptoms such as heat and cold. The scabs are found in children, in exposed places such as faces and limbs, starting with red spots and scavengers, rapidly turning into scavengers, scavengers, infection wherever the scavenger flows, and creating new scavengers. 2. Factal skin infections: handbreeding, footbreading and gills have similar characteristics, typically manifested in a clear-cut circle or polycyclic red spots, rises on the edges, crumbs, the centre tends to recede, itching is unbearable, and scratches are fragile, followed by bacterial infections. The gills often occur in the groin area, with local heat and damp and rash shapes similar to gills, but because of excessive friction, the skin is thicker and rougher. The gills are white, yellow and black, most of which are found in children, with gray and white crumbs on the scalp, hair fractures and white fungus on the roots; the gills smell of special rat urine, thick skins and permanent bald hair when the fur is destroyed; and the gills are scattered in spot shires, and the hair is broken when the hair comes out, in black form. 3. Virus-skin infections: Herpes rashes are caused by a pox-band herpes virus, which is distributed on a single side of the nervous system, and is stylisted, tectonic and painful, with pre-heating, incapacitating symptoms in some cases before the rash. Anomalous ailments, such as sauerkraut, which is the result of human papilloma virus infection, are manifested in soybeans-sized and rubella, which are rough on the surface and hard on the ground and can occur in any part of the body; the sauerkraut tends to be flat ablaze, so that it can have a large number of rashes on the face, on the back, and often beaded with a string of scratch marks.
Knowledge of “combating” skin infections 1. The prevention element: daily skin clean-up, but not excessive, choice of mild, clean-face products and bathing. When the skin is dry, skin cream is applied in a timely manner to maintain the integrity of the skin barrier. Care is taken of personal hygiene, hand-washing, changing laundry, public places such as swimming pools, bathrooms, and wearing protective clothing. Actively treating basic diseases such as diabetes mellitus. Increased exercise, regularity, balanced diet and increased body immunity. 2. Treatment of bacterial infections: Depending on the condition, the minor is partially coated with antibiotic ointment, such as mouperos and vescic acid emulsions, and the heavy is oral or intravenous head spores and penicillin. Anti-fungles drugs are commonly used for fungal infections, with external uses such as ketone emulsions, Tebisphen emulsions, and long treatments, which generally take 2-4 weeks, with the severers cooperating with the oral administration of Ictarconamex and Tebisprone, with periodic monitoring of the liver function during the medication. Virus infections, with herpes, are used within 72 hours of the onset of the disease, using antiviral drugs such as Atsurove and Versailles, which can reduce symptoms, reduce the pathology, and help with nutritional neuropharmaceuticals such as Mecochlor, to relieve nervous pains; entropy diseases can be treated by physical treatment such as refrigeration, lasers, electric burning, etc. Skin infection is not terrible, as long as we understand it, prevent it, and treat it right, we can keep the skin healthy for long.