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PRICKLY HEAT
Prickly heat, or miliaria, is an inflammatory skin
derangement affecting the sweat-glands.
Symptoms.--Prickling,
stinging, and itching of the skin. Hot weather has but little to do with
it. Neglect of the care of the skin allows the pores to close, and when the
weather becomes warm there is usually more thirst than in cool weather.
Drinking raises the blood-pressure, favoring perspiration; and when perspiration
cannot pass through the pores of the surface, it produces irritation through a
filling-up of the sweat-glands, causing pressure on nerve filaments. This
brings on a stinging, prickling, and itching. Those who have deranged
digestion--those troubled with gastro-intestinal catarrh--create an acute
irritation of the stomach from ice-cream, excessive fruit-eating, etc. This
irritation is reflected to the surface of the body, and produces abnormal
contraction of the sweat-glands.
I have noticed in these cases that there is always a
good deal of nervousness, the function of the skin is interfered with, and
anything that creates an extra amount of heat at the surface will cause
itching, prickling, and burning. The patient feels very uncomfortable.
Prickly heat in children indicates that the child is
overfed; and the same is true of grown people. We never have any skin
derangements whatever unless there is chronic gastro-intestinal catarrh.
Long-continued heat, as in summer time, further enervates the enervated,
weakening the power of digestion, and turning loose morbid functional
derangements in keeping with predispositions. Add to this imprudent eating an
excessive amount of fruit, ice-cream, or iced drinks, or an excessive amount of
food of any kind, and in the nervous, neurotic, or gouty subjects various kinds
of skin irritations will result. If the irritations are of the mucous membrane,
intestinal derangements appear. I look upon prickly heat as a decidedly nervous
derangement.
Treatment.--A fast of one, two, or three days,
with daily bathing in water as hot as can be borne, will bring relief sooner
than any other treatment. Bathing the surface with lotions, ointments, or the
usual palliative surface treatment is neither logical nor sensible. The pores
should be kept open, instead of being filled up with salves or forced to
contract by so-called soothing lotions. The bath opens the pores, and the fast
relieves the irritations of the stomach and bowels. It does not require a very
great deal of time to bring full relief. If palliation is all that is desired,
this treatment can end as all palliative treatment ends, and with the priests
of healing flattering themselves that they have performed a cure. But this
so-called disease points to a constitutional derangement that should be looked
after; for it may manifest itself in various ways when the weather becomes
cool. Bronchial irritation or pneumonia may be the price paid for neglect of
correction of the constitutional derangement.
The reader must not forget that enervation, checked
elimination, with retention of toxins in the blood, is the basic cause of all
the ills that man is heir to; hence it is necessary, when eating is begun after
relief is secured, to feed very lightly and very plain food.
The child can have a glass of milk for breakfast, and a salad at noon. If he is too young to
masticate the salad well, it should be run through the vegetable mill. A teacup
of the ground salad will make the noon meal, and prunes or baked apples, with
cream dressing, the evening meal. As the child improves, he can be given
toasted bread, with a little unsalted butter, for breakfast, followed with a
half-dozen prunes, dressed with a little cream. If not satisfied, follow with a
cup of hot water, a little cream, and a lump of sugar. At noon, have a slice of
whole-wheat bread, toasted, the same as for breakfast, followed with ground
salad. In the evening, prunes or baked apples, or any fresh fruit, followed
with milk. After this, feed according to the instructions found elsewhere.
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