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You're having a sweat blister. Hormones can be used for a short period of time**.
Dyshishicula is an eczematous change (allergic **inflammation change) that occurs on the hands or feet, and often has severe itching on the palms, soles of the feet, fingers, and toes on both sides of the patient, and many small, diffuse or collectible blisters, some of which are papules. Some of these blisters occur rapidly within a few hours, but most of them increase over several days, and sometimes the blisters that collect can form large blisters, making it impossible for the patient to do things with their hands or walk on their feet. These blisters are sometimes complicated by bacterial infection and have a purulent reaction.
These acute-phase blisters resolve quickly after acute, but they still occur. Usually the blisters will not break, they will be naturally absorbed and dried up, and after one or two weeks, the blisters will peel off into a round dry skin and dandruff wheel, **showing the phenomenon of dryness, peeling and cracking, and there is pain, and then it will return to normal**. Dyshidrosis is more common in young men and women and in early middle age (20 to 40 years), and most patients have hyperhidrosis, but the disease does not result from blocked sweat ducts or bulging sweat ducts into blisters.
It tends to flare up every summer or at the turn of the season, and lasts 3-4 weeks at a time. Some patients become chronic. Some patients have an ectopic constitution or nickel allergy.
Avoiding allergens may improve symptoms, but not completely**. Some patients get worse when they are emotionally stressed and stay up late. The real ** is currently unknown.
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It's okay, it'll be fine on its own soon.
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It's not that serious, your problem should be considered seborrheic dermatitis, if you use drugs** you can use "hydrocortisone butyrate cream". The last time I went to the hospital, the doctor prescribed this medicine for me, just apply it. Actually, leave it alone, and it will be fine after some time. Don't worry.
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Based on the symptoms you described, you may have an anal fistula, and it is recommended that you go to the hospital for diagnosis, and the anal fistula will not bleed when you have a bowel movement.
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Not so exaggerated Hemorrhoids are divided into extraordinary, internal. But yours doesn't look like it, that thing has been grown by many people, it's normal, I can't remember what it's called, but it hurts if you squeeze it, and it hurts a little if you don't squeeze it.
It hurts.
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I've also been going to the hospital or asking my family to find a needle at home, and after disinfection, I will pick the skin and break it, not poke it, just pick a small opening, just squeeze out the concentrated liquid, it doesn't hurt.
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If you don't move it, it won't hurt, but it will be "uneven", which is a acne scar, and it will be red, and it will be difficult to get rid of it in the future.
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It doesn't matter if the hepatitis B vaccine contains adsorbents, as long as the effect is not large, it will be absorbed automatically and slowly over time, and it will not affect the body. The main reason may be: the doctor did not shake it well during inoculation, resulting in too much local residue of the adsorbent.
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Under normal circumstances, hepatitis B vaccine will not affect daily work and life, so far there has been no serious phenomenon caused by injection, only a small number of people have redness, swelling, induration, pain at the vaccination site, arm soreness or fever, nausea, vomiting, fatigue, rash and other mild reactions that are roughly similar to general vaccination, and most of them will not heal within 1 3 days.