| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name
 | Date | Lines | 
|---|
| 240.1 | going around | TNPUBS::STEINHART | Laura | Fri Jul 24 1992 16:27 | 6 | 
|  |     Seems to be going around.  I met a woman in the bank with a 1 year old
    with the same problem.  Her doctor could offer no medication but
    recommended soft foods for the duration.
    
    L
    
 | 
| 240.2 | try yogurt ? | TLE::RANDALL | The Year of Hurricane Bonnie | Mon Jul 27 1992 10:04 | 5 | 
|  |     You might try giving him some yogurt -- the yogurt cultures help
    restore the bacterial balance in the stomach and intestine after a
    round of antibiotics, so they might help in the mouth, too.
    
    --bonnie
 | 
| 240.3 | Maybe it was Coxsackie | MR4DEC::DONCHIN |  | Tue Jul 28 1992 12:42 | 16 | 
|  |     My son is just getting over Coxsackie virus, which produced many sores
    in his mouth as well as his hands and feet (Coxsackie is also known as
    "hoof-in-mouth" disease, or something like that). I had this confirmed
    by his doctor, since the sores were appearing faster than I could count
    them on Friday and I wanted to know what he really had (I thought it
    could be Chicken Pox at first, but it wasn't following a familiar
    pattern). So .0, it's possible that your child may actually have had
    Coxsackie (which is contagious, for parents who have never had a child
    with this lovely virus).
    
    I was told about the Benadryl/Kaopectate combo but I never had a chance
    to use it. Out of curiousity, does anyone know why these two
    medications are effective for the sores and discomfort of a virus such
    as this one?
    
    Nancy-
 | 
| 240.4 |  | PHAROS::PATTON |  | Tue Jul 28 1992 12:54 | 8 | 
|  |     My son is also getting over Coxsackie (also called hand/foot/mouth
    virus because that's where sores can appear). In his case, the symptoms
    were headache, some moderate fever, and very sore throat caused by
    the lesions. The virus is passed easily via the fecal/oral route, 
    so handwashing is the best way to avoid passing it or getting it.
    
    
    Lucy
 | 
| 240.5 |  | SUPER::WTHOMAS |  | Tue Jul 28 1992 13:00 | 11 | 
|  |     
    	And my son also just got over this, we started noticing little red
    spots all over him and had him checked for chicken pox. Turned out it
    was hand/foot/mouth and the Doctor told us that he would be cranky for
    the next 2-3 days and then it would pass.
    
    	Sure enough, he had difficulty sleeping and was very irritable but
    now (4 days later) he appears to be fine and just has the faintest of
    pink marks where the spots used to be.
    
    			Wendy
 | 
| 240.6 | Gly-Oxide helps too | MAIL::KOETTINGL | Laurie Koetting DTN 445-6436 | Mon Aug 03 1992 13:01 | 5 | 
|  |     My 14 month old daughter just got over a similar virus...and WHAT A
    MISERABLE EXPERIENCE!  She lived on Tylenol, Orajel and Gly-Oxide for a
    week and a half. Gly-Oxide was recommended by our pediatrician to help
    the canker sores heal faster. You can buy it at most drug stores.
    
 | 
| 240.7 | make your own GlyOxide | AKOCOA::TRIPP |  | Tue Aug 04 1992 14:17 | 12 | 
|  |     I second the GlyOxide, it has been a favorite cure since my childhood. 
    It just tends to be a little pricey, consider a home made batch: just
    mix equal portions of ordinary hydrogin peroxide with ordinary
    glycerine (might have to ask the pharmacist for some, it isn't always
    sold on the shelf).  We mix it in one of the sterilized specimine
    containers, but any container you can boil to sterilize (including an
    old baby food jar or baby bottle) will work.  I apply it with a Q-tip,
    or even better there is something sold for applying makeup which looks
    like a flat tipped Q-tip, not as apt to shed its cotton.
    
    Hope this works for you, I always looked at it like a miracle cure!
    Lyn
 |