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Early Detection of
Baby Disease
It is
highly important that a mother should possess such
information as will enable her to detect disease at its first
appearance, and
thus insure for her child timely medical assistance. This knowledge it
will not
be difficult for her to obtain. She has only to bear in mind what are
the
indications which constitute health, and she will at once see that all
deviations from it must denote the presence of disorder, if not of
actual
disease. With these changes she must to a certain extent make herself
acquainted.
Signs
of health.
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The
signs of health are to be found, first, in the healthy
performance of the various functions of the body; the regular demands
made for
its supply, neither in excess or deficiency; and a similar regularity
in its
excretions both in quantity and appearance.
If the
figure of the healthy infant is observed, something
may be learnt from this. There will be perceived such a universal
roundness in
all parts of the baby's body, that there is no such thing as an angle
to be
found in the whole figure; whether the limbs are bent or straight,
every line
forms a portion of a circle. The limbs will feel firm and solid, and
unless
they are bent, the joints cannot be discovered.
The
tongue, even in health, is always white, but it will be
free from sores, the skin cool, the eye bright, the complexion clear,
the head
cool, and the abdomen not projecting too far, the breathing regular,
and
without effort.
When
awake, the infant will be cheerful and sprightly, and,
loving to be played with, will often break out into its merry, happy,
laugh;
whilst, on the other hand, when asleep, it will appear calm, every
feature
composed, its countenance displaying an expression of happiness, and
frequently, perhaps, lit up with a smile.
Just in
proportion as the above appearances are present and
entire, health may be said to exist; and just in proportion to their
partial or
total absence disease will have usurped its place.
We
will, however, for the sake of clearness examine the
signs of disease as they are manifested separately by the countenance,
the
gestures, in sleep, in the stools, and by the breathing and cough.
Of the
countenance.
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In
health the countenance of a baby
is expressive of
serenity in mind and body; but if the child be unwell, this expression
will be
changed, and in a manner which, to a certain extent, will indicate what
part of
the system is at fault.
The
brows will be contracted, if there is pain, and its seat
is in the head. This is frequently the very first outward sign of any
thing
being wrong, and will occur at the very onset of disease; if therefore
remarked
at an early period, and proper remedies used, its notice may prevent
one of the
most fearful of infantile complaints "Water in the Head."
If this
sign is passed by unheeded, and the above disease be
threatened, soon the eyes will become fixed and staring, the head hot,
and
moved uneasily from side to side upon the pillow, or lie heavily upon
the
nurse's arm, the baby
will start in its sleep, grinding its teeth, and awake
alarmed and screaming, its face will be flushed, particularly the
cheeks (as if
rouged), its hands hot, but feet cold, its bowels obstinately costive,
or its
motions scanty, dark-colored, and foul.
If the
lips are drawn apart, so as to show the teeth or
gums, the seat of the pain is in the belly. This sign, however, will
only be
present during the actual existence of suffering; if, therefore, there
be any
doubt whether it exist, press upon the stomach, and watch the effect on
the
expression of the countenance.
If the
pain arise simply from irritation of the bowels
excited from indigestion, it will be temporary, and the sign will go
and come
just as the spasm may occur, and slight remedial measures will give
relief.
If,
however, the disease be more serious, and inflammation
ensue, this sign will be more constantly present, and soon the
countenance will
become pale, or sallow and sunken, the baby will dread
motion, and lie upon
its back with the knees bent up to the belly, the tongue will be
loaded, and in
breathing, while the chest will be seen to heave with more than usual
effort,
the muscles of the belly will remain perfectly quiescent.
If the
nostrils are drawn upwards and in quick motion, pain
exists in the chest. This sign, however, will generally be the
accompaniment of
inflammation of the chest, in which case the countenance will be
discolored,
the eyes more or less staring, and the breathing will be difficult and
hurried;
and if the child's mode of respiring be watched, the chest will be
observed to
be unmoved, while the belly quickly heaves with every inspiration.
Convulsions
are generally preceded by some changes in the
countenance. The upper lip will be drawn up, and is occasionally bluish
or
livid. Then there may be slight squinting, or a singular rotation of
the eye
upon its own axis; alternate flushing or paleness of the face; and
sudden
animation followed by languor.
These
signs will sometimes manifest themselves many hours,
nay days, before the attack occurs; may be looked upon as premonitory;
and if
timely noticed, and suitable medical aid resorted to, the occurrence of
a fit
may be altogether prevented.
The
state of the eyes should always be attended to. In
health they are clear and bright, but in disease they become dull, and
give a
heavy appearance to the countenance; though after long continued
irritation
they will assume a degree of quickness which is very remarkable, and a
sort of
pearly brightness which is better known from observation than it can be
from
description.
The
direction of the eyes, too, should be regarded, for from
this we may learn something. When the infant is first brought to the
light,
both eyes are scarcely ever directed to the same object: this occurs
without
any tendency to disease, and merely proves, that regarding one object
with both
eyes is only an acquired habit. But when the child has come to that age
when
the eyes are by habit directed to the same object, and afterwards it
loses that
power, this circumstance alone may be looked upon as a frequent prelude
to
disease affecting the head.
Of the
gestures.
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The
gestures of a healthy child are all easy and natural;
but in sickness those deviations occur, which alone will often denote
the
nature of the disease.
Suppose
an infant to have acquired the power to support
itself, to hold its head erect; let sickness come, its head will droop
immediately, and this power will be lost, only to be regained with the
return
of health; and during the interval every posture and movement will be
that of
languor.
The
little one that has just taught itself to run alone from
chair to chair, having two or three teeth pressing upon and irritating
the
gums, will for a time be completely taken off its feet, and perhaps lie
languidly in its cot, or on its nurse's arm.
The
legs being drawn up to the belly, and accompanied by
crying, are proofs of disorder and pain in the bowels. Press upon this
part,
and your pressure will increase the pain. Look to the secretions from
the
bowels themselves, and by their unhealthy character your suspicions, in
reference to the seat of the disorder, are at once confirmed.
The
hands of a child in health are rarely carried above its
mouth; but let there be any thing wrong about the head and pain
present, and
the little one's hands will be constantly raised to the head and face.
Sudden
starting when awake, as also during sleep, though it
occur from trifling causes, should never be disregarded. It is
frequently connected
with approaching disorder of the brain. It may forebode a convulsive
fit, and
such suspicion is confirmed, if you find the thumb of the child drawn
in and
firmly pressed upon the palm, with the fingers so compressed upon it,
that the
hand cannot be forced open without difficulty. The same condition will
exist in
the toes, but not to so great a degree; there may also be a puffy state
of the
back of the hands and feet, and both foot and wrist bent downwards.
There
are other and milder signs threatening convulsions and
connected with gesture, which should be regarded: the head being drawn
rigidly
backwards, an arm fixed firmly to the side, or near to it, as also one
of the
legs drawn stiffly upwards. These signs, as also those enumerated
above, are confirmed
beyond all doubt, if there be present certain alterations in the usual
habits
of the child: if the sleep is disturbed, if there be frequent fits of
crying,
great peevishness of temper, the countenance alternately flushed and
pale,
sudden animation followed by as sudden a fit of languor, catching of
the breath
followed by a long and deep inspiration, all so many premonitory
symptoms of an
approaching attack.
Of the
sleep.
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The
sleep of the infant in health is quiet, composed, and
refreshing. In very early infancy, when not at the breast, it is for
the most
part asleep in its cot; and although as the months advance it sleeps
less, yet
when the hour for repose arrives, the child is no sooner laid down to
rest,
than it drops off into a quiet, peaceful slumber.
Not so,
if ill. Frequently it will be unwilling to be put
into its cot at all, and the nurse will be obliged to take the infant
in her
arms; it will then sleep but for a short time, and in a restless and
disturbed
manner.
If it
suffer pain, however slight, the countenance will
indicate it; and, as when awake, so now, if there is any thing wrong
about the
head, the contraction of the eye-brow and grinding of the teeth will
appear; if
any thing wrong about the belly, the lips will be drawn apart, showing
the
teeth or gums, and in both instances there will be great restlessness
and
frequent starting.
Of the
stools.
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In the
new-born infant the motions are dark colored, very
much like pitch both in consistence and appearance. The first milk,
however,
secreted in the mother's breast, acts as an aperient upon the infant's
bowels,
and thus in about four-and-twenty hours it is cleansed away.
From
this time, and through the whole of infancy, the stools
will be of a lightish yellow color, the consistence of thin mustard,
having
little smell, smooth in appearance, and therefore free from lumps or
white
curded matter, and passed without pain or any considerable quantity of
wind.
And as long as the child is in health, it will have daily two or three,
or even
four, of these evacuations. But as it grows older, they will not be
quite so
frequent; they will become darker in color, and more solid, though not
so much
so as in the adult.
Any
deviation, then, from the above characters, is of course
a sign of something wrong; and as a deranged condition of the bowels is
frequently the first indication we have of coming disease, the nurse
should
daily be directed to watch the evacuations. Their appearance, color,
and the
manner in which discharged, are the points principally to be looked to.
If the
stools have a very curdy appearance, or are too liquid, or green, or
dark-colored,
or smell badly, they are unnatural. And in reference to the manner in
which
they are discharged, it should be borne in mind that, in a healthy
child, the
motion is passed with but little wind and as if squeezed out, but in
disease,
it will be thrown out with considerable force, which is a sign of great
irritation. The number, too, of stools passed within the four-and-
twenty hours
it is important to note, so that if the child does not have its
accustomed
relief, (and it must not be forgotten that children, although in
perfect
health, differ as to the precise number,)
Of the
breathing and cough
--------------------------
The
breathing of a child in health is formed of equal
inspirations and expirations, and it breathes quietly, regularly,
inaudibly,
and without effort. But let inflammation of the air-tubes or lungs take
place,
and the inspiration will become in a few hours so quickened and
hurried, and
perhaps audible, that the attention has only to be directed to the
circumstance
to be at once perceived.
Now all
changes which occur in the breathing from its
healthy standard, however slight the shades of difference may be, it is
most
important should be noticed early. For many of the complaints in the
chest,
although very formidable in their character, if only seen early by the
medical
man, may be arrested in their progress; but otherwise, may be beyond
the control
of art. A parent, therefore, should make herself familiar with the
breathing of
her child in health, and she will readily mark any change which may
arise.
Whenever
a child has the symptoms of a common cold, attended
by hoarseness and a rough cough, always look upon it with suspicion,
and never
neglect seeking a medical opinion. Hoarseness does not usually attend a
common
cold in the child, and these symptoms may be premonitory of an attack
of
"croup;" a disease excessively rapid in its progress, and which, from
the importance of the parts affected, carrying on, as they do, a
function
indispensably necessary to life, requires the most prompt and decided
treatment.
The
following observations of Dr. Cheyne are so strikingly
illustrative, and so pertinent to my present purpose, that I cannot
refrain
inserting them: "In the approach of an attack of croup, which almost
always takes place in the evening, probably of a day during which the baby has
been exposed to the weather, and often after catarrhal symptoms have
existed
for several days, he may be observed to be excited, in variable
spirits, more
ready than usual to laugh than to cry, a little flushed, occasionally
coughing,
the sound of the cough being rough, like that which attends the
catarrhal stage
of the measles. More generally, however, the patient has been for some
time in
bed and asleep, before the nature of the disease with which he is
threatened is
apparent; then, perhaps, without waking, he gives a very unusual cough,
well
known to any one who has witnessed an attack of the croup; it rings as
if the
child had coughed through a brazen trumpet; it is truly a tussis
clangosa; it
penetrates the walls and floor of the apartment, and startles the
experienced
mother, 'Oh! I am afraid our child is taking the croup!' She runs to
the
nursery, finds her child sleeping softly, and hopes she may be
mistaken. But
remaining to tend him, before long the ringing cough, a single cough,
is
repeated again and again; the patient is roused, and then a new symptom
is remarked;
the sound of his voice is changed; puling, and as if the throat were
swelled,
it corresponds with the cough," etc.
How
important that a mother should be acquainted with the
above signs of one of the most terrific complaints to which childhood
is
subject; for, if she only send for medical assistance during its first
stage,
the treatment will be almost invariably successful; whereas, if this
"golden opportunity" is lost, this disease will seldom yield to the
influence of measures, however wisely chosen or perseveringly employed.
About The Author
Edward
Pena is an internet marketing consultant and writer..
He runs
an informational website to help people learn about baby and child
care.. His sites
offer free articles on baby and child care and products.
To take advantage of
all this cool stuff and more, be sure to check out Ed’s site
at Babies
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