environmental triggers

Soothing Baths For Your Kid's Itchy Skin

Baths can have potent anti-inflammatory and antioxidant benefits and can be super helpful for managing your kiddo’s skin symptoms, like the itch.⁠

Here are some of my favs:⁠

👉🏻Apple cider vinegar can balance skin pH levels and manage infection and inflammation. Dilute 1/4 to 1/2 cup apple cider vinegar in warm bath water. Soak for 10-20 minutes.⁠

👉🏻Epsom salt may help decrease itching, inflammation, and redness and assist with detoxification. Use 2 cups for a full bath, 1 cup for a half bath, and 1/8 cup for a baby bath. Dissolve in warm bath water. Soak for 10-20 minutes.⁠

👉🏻Baking soda may help prevent eczema flare-ups, reduce symptoms, draw impurities and toxins out of the skin, and boost immunity. However, it’s also alkaline, so it may strip the skin of its protective natural oils and disrupt the skin flora, especially if overused. 1/8 to 1/4 cup of baking soda. Dissolve in warm bath water. Soak for 10-20 minutes.⁠

👉🏻Colloidal oatmeal can have potent anti-inflammatory, anti-itch, and antioxidant benefits for the skin. Grind 1 cup gluten-free oats for a full bath and 1/3 cup for a baby bath (use a food processor, blender, or coffee grinder). When the oatmeal dissolves by putting a small amount in a glass of warm water, you’re ready to add the oats to a bath. Add oats until the water is milky in color. Soak for 10-15 minutes.⁠

👉🏻Rice starch has antioxidant properties and may reduce skin irritation, improve and repair the skin barrier, promote healing, and balance sebum production. Add 2 heaping Tbsp of rice starch to a baby bath, 4 heaping Tbsp to a medium bath, or 7 heaping Tbsp to a normal-sized bath. The water should look milky in color. Soak for 10-15 minutes. ⁠

👉🏻Dead sea salt. Dissolve Dead Sea Salts into warm bath water: 2 cups for a full bath, 1 cup for 1/2 a bath, and 1/8 cup for a baby bath. Soak for 20 minutes.⁠

👉🏻Plain water versus bleach baths. A safe dilution of bleach in bathwater isn’t potent enough to kill S. aureus on the skin. If bleach baths have helped your child, it might actually be due to the water and not the bleach. Do not increase a bleach bath dilution; it can damage the skin, eyes, nose, throat, and lungs and even cause permanent damage to these delicate tissues.

*Always read labels to make sure it’s safe for your child. Using food-based ingredients on the skin can increase the risk of developing food allergies. If your child is already eating the foods and tolerates them, there’s less of a concern. If your child hasn’t eaten those foods yet or has allergies to them, avoid use on the skin.

What baths help your kid get some relief? LMK👇🏼

Should Your Child's Skin Be Acidic?

Maintaining the right skin pH is critical for helping with your child’s itchy, rashy skin. ⁠

On the pH scale, 7 and higher is basic (alkaline), and 7 and lower is acidic. ⁠

Skin pH is slightly acidic and that helps keep the skin barrier functioning the way it’s supposed to. ⁠

When skin pH gets disrupted, you get leaky skin, and dry, itchy rashes. ⁠

Even an increased colonization of problematic skin bacteria, like Staph aureus!⁠

Avoid making your child’s skin alkaline! Things that contribute to that are: ⁠
👉🏻Hard water⁠
👉🏻Many if not most soaps, cleansers, and moisturizers (even natural products)⁠
👉🏻Over use of baking soda baths⁠

Other factors that play a role in skin pH:⁠
👉🏻Lighter skin is slightly more alkaline than darker skin⁠
👉🏻Skin pH differs from body part to body part (i.e. armpits and private regions have higher pHs, which can be why those areas are more problematic in some kids)⁠

There are sooo many other factors, too.⁠

To learn more, and get strategies to help your child’s skin heal from the outside in, get my Free Guide “Ditch the Itch!”⁠

Is your child's skin itchier at night? It's not a coincidence...

If your child can’t sleep because of their itchy rashes, it’s not just because there’s nothing else to focus on while lying there.⁠

Changes happen in the body at night that can make itch worse, including:⁠

👉Skin gets leakier
👉Skin gets drier
👉Blood vessels dilate and constrict more, which increases histamine
👉Immune cytokines (other than histamine) are more active at night, increasing immune responses, including those that trigger itch symptoms

What you can do about it:

👉Take an antihistamine before bed. There are natural options, too, like quercetin, vitamin c, and immunoglobulins⁠.
👉Moisturize before bed⁠
👉Try a therapeutic massage with that moisturizer! It’s a great bonding strategy, and it’s relaxing.⁠

Is your child itchier at night? LMK👇️⁠

For some tips that can help, get my free guide, Ditch the Itch!

Foods that help heal leaky gut

If you’re trying to heal your kid’s gut, a great place to start is with gut-healing foods. 

Here are some to add to your kiddo’s diet if they’re not in already:

Protein (chicken, beef, fish, beans, dairy, nuts, seeds, soy) - amino acids from protein are building blocks for all structures in the body down to the cellular level, including cells in the gut lining, improve the integrity of the gut barrier, and important for mucin synthesis

FODMAPs (garlic, onions, cauliflower, celery, cassava, beans) - increase stool volume improve calcium absorption, increase production of short-chain fatty acids, and of good flora like bifidobacterium and others

Probiotic foods (yogurt, kefir, sauerkraut, fermented veggies) - anti-inflammatory, strengthen the gut mucosal barrier, lower hyperpermeability, and produce short-chain fatty acids

Vitamins A and D (orange and red veggies and fruits, cod liver oil, egg yolk, mushrooms) - positively impact mucosal barrier integrity, the immune system, and gut flora 

Fiber and short-chain fatty acids (starchy and nonstarchy veggies, whole grains, nuts, and seeds, butter, and ghee) - anti-inflammatory and regulate intestinal barrier function

Polyphenols (rainbow assortment of veggies and fruit) - antioxidant, lower intestinal permeability, and oxidative stress, and increase mucus secretion

What gut-healing foods are in your kid’s diet? LMK!

PMID: 36677677

Can food allergies be reversed or prevented?

When there are food allergies, the fear of reactions can cause major stress, tons of anxiety, even depression, and food fear leading to an ever shrinking diet and under nourishment for so many kids.

If your child has chronic skin rashes, they’re at greater risk for developing food allergies because they can more easily get sensitized to allergens through their leaky skin.

In fact, leaky skin associated with eczema is a known risk factor for developing food allergies.

Food allergies affect the entire family. The statistics are alarming. There’s been a 300% increase in food allergies in children over the past 20 years!

If your kid has food allergies, you might be wondering if they can be reversed. If you’re thinking about having more kids, you also might what to know if they can be prevented.

Here are some good places to start.

If your child already has food allergies:

👉follow your doctor’s guidance about what to keep out and what is safe to keep in

Whether or not your child has food allergies, and for you if pregnant or nursing:

👉Avoid eating processed junk food

👉Increase gut microbiome diversity by eating pre and probiotic foods, and taking a probiotic supplement (kids with food allergies have lower levels of certain healthy gut bacteria)

👉Eat the broadest diet possible including common allergens that are tolerated (the broader the diet = greater gut microbiome diversity)

👉Supplement with Omega 3s (EPA and DHA)

👉Get vitamin D levels optimal and supplement if needed

👉Minimize exposure to air pollutants

👉Support skin and gut barriers. Two primary ways food allergies develop are through leaky skin and leaky gut.

What Qs do you have about your kid’s food allergies? LMK!

https://doi.org/10.3390/ nu16060838

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.anai.2024.03.010

Will antihistamines help your child’s itchy skin?

Will antihistamines help your child’s itchy skin?

If your child is struggling with itchy rashes, you’ve probably gone down the histamine rabbit hole.⁠

That makes a lot of sense, because histamine can cause itch symptoms. ⁠

But I want you to know that the itch that’s associated with eczema more often than not, has nothing to do with histamine. ⁠

Here’s how you can tell whether or not your child’s itch is histamine related... this isn’t exactly scientific (far from it), but I find it to be a pretty good way to figure out this piece of the puzzle for your child.⁠

If a regular, over the counter product like Claritin, Zyrtec, or Benadryl helps with itch symptoms then most likely there’s a histamine component to what’s happening.⁠

If that’s the case, then it’s possible a natural antihistamine like quercetin, vitamin C, and immunoglobulins, will help. ⁠

These can be great alternatives because they don’t shut off histamine like a conventional antihistamine does. Histamine is not all bad! It’s a neurotransmitter, it’s part of a normal and healthy immune response, and it’s part of the digestive process. All this makes shutting it off, especially longer term, a BIG problem. ⁠

If these products do not help with itch, it’s likely it’s not histamine causing the problem, and that means a natural alternative most likely won’t help either.⁠

If something like Benadryl helps with sleep, that’s different than it helping with itch (keep that in mind).⁠

Do antihistamines help your child’s itchy skin? LMK!

Environmental factors influencing the development of eczema

A study conducted in China found that a number of environmental factors could influence the development of eczema in children. On that list are:

  • New furniture and furnishings

  • Mold or dampness in mom's home before and during pregnancy, and during baby’s first year of life

  • Air conditioning

  • Keeping windows open while sleeping

  • Pest exposure (cockroaches, flies, mosquitoes) in the home and during baby’s first year of life

  • Pets and flowering plants in the home

  • Passive smoking in the home currently, during baby's first year of life, and during mom's pregnancy

  • Frequency of cleaning

I find that while we are working on addressing internal imbalances at the root of the problem, environmental triggers continue to throw fuel on the fire.

It makes it really hard to put it out.

The good news is that we can make changes to prevent or limit exposures. What do you think? Could any of these be triggers for your child's rash flares?

Reference

  • https://bmcpediatr.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12887-021-02819-5