Overview
Hand-foot-and-mouth disease
is an illness that causes sores in or on the mouth and
on the hands, feet, and sometimes the buttocks and legs. The sores may be
painful. The illness usually doesn't last more than a week or so.
Hand-foot-and-mouth disease
is common in children but can also occur in adults. It can occur at any time of
year but is most common in the summer and fall.
It is not the same as other diseases that have
similar names: foot-and-mouth
disease (sometimes called hoof-and-mouth disease) or mad cow disease. These
diseases almost always occur in animals.
Hand-foot-and-mouth disease is caused by a virus called anenterovirus.
The virus spreads easily through coughing and sneezing.
It can also spread through infected stool, such as when you change a diaper or
when a young child gets stool on his or her hands and then touches objects that
other children put in their mouths. Often the disease breaks out within a
community.
It usually takes 3 to 6 days for a person to get symptoms of
hand-foot-and-mouth disease after being exposed to the virus. This is called
the incubation period.
At first your child may feel tired, get a sore throat,
or have a fever of around 101°F (38°C) to 103°F (39°C). Then in
a day or two, sores orblisters may
appear in or on the mouth and on the hands, feet, and sometimes the buttocks.
In some cases a skin rash may
appear before the blisters do.
The blisters may break open and crust over.
The sores and blisters usually go away in a week or so.
In some cases there are no symptoms, or they are very mild.
Parents may get the disease from their children and not even realize it.
A doctor can tell if your child has hand-foot-and-mouth disease
by the symptoms you describe and by looking at the sores and blisters. Tests
usually aren't needed.
How is it treated?
Hand-foot-and-mouth disease usually doesn't
need treatment. You can use home care to help relieve your child's symptoms.
·
Offer your child plenty of cool fluids to help with sore throat.
Cold foods such as flavored ice pops and ice cream also may help.
·
Don't give your child acidic or spicy foods and drinks, such as
salsa or orange juice. These foods can make mouth sores more painful.
·
For pain and fever, give your child acetaminophen (such
as Tylenol)
or ibuprofen (such
as Advil).
Do not give your child aspirin.
It has been linked to Reye syndrome, a serious
illness.
Children are most likely to spread the disease
during the first week of the illness. But the virus can stay in the stool for
several months and may spread to others. To help prevent the disease from
spreading:
·
If your child goes to day care or school,
talk to the staff about when your child can return.
·
Wash your hands frequently.
It is especially important to wash your hands after
you touch a blister or change the diaper of an infected child.
·
Teach all family members to wash their hands often. It is
especially important to wash your hands after
you change the diaper of an infected child.
Don't let your child share
toys or give kisses while he or she is infected.Source:
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