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      • When the same type of fungus affects the feet, it is called athlete's foot, or tinea pedis. The infection usually starts on the feet. When athlete's foot is not properly treated, it spreads to other areas, including the hands. It may also affect the groin or other body parts.
      www.verywellhealth.com/athletes-foot-hand-5324718
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  2. Jan 30, 2024 · Hand, foot, and mouth disease, or HFMD, is a common childhood illness that can also happen in adults. The hallmark symptoms of hand, foot, and mouth disease are sores in the mouth and a rash on the hands and feet.

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    Hand-foot-and-mouth disease may cause all of the following symptoms or only some of them. They include:

    •Fever.

    •Sore throat.

    •Feeling sick.

    •Painful, blister-like lesions on the tongue, gums and inside of the cheeks.

    •A rash on the palms, soles and sometimes the buttocks. The rash is not itchy, but sometimes it has blisters. Depending on skin tone, the rash may appear red, white, gray, or only show as tiny bumps.

    Hand-foot-and-mouth disease is usually a minor illness. It typically only causes fever and mild symptoms for a few days. Call your health care provider if your child is younger than six months, has a weakened immune system, or has mouth sores or a sore throat that makes it painful to drink fluids. Call your provider, too, if your child's symptoms don't improve after 10 days.

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    The most common cause of hand-foot-and-mouth disease is infection from coxsackievirus 16. This coxsackievirus belongs to a group of viruses called nonpolio enteroviruses. Other types of enteroviruses also may cause hand-foot-and-mouth disease.

    Most people get the coxsackievirus infection — and hand-foot-and-mouth disease — through the mouth. The illness spreads by person-to-person contact with an infected person's:

    •Nose secretions or throat discharge

    •Saliva

    •Fluid from blisters

    •Stool

    Age is the main risk factor for hand-foot-and-mouth disease. The disease mostly affects children younger than ages 5 to 7 years. Children in child care settings are especially vulnerable because the infection spreads by person-to-person contact.

    Hand-foot-mouth-disease typically affects young children, but anyone can get it.

    The most common complication of hand-foot-and-mouth disease is dehydration. The illness can cause sores in the mouth and throat, making it painful to swallow.

    Encourage your child to drink fluids during the illness. If children become too dehydrated, they may need intravenous (IV) fluids in the hospital.

    Hand-foot-and-mouth disease is usually a minor illness. It usually only causes fever and mild symptoms for a few days. Sometimes the enterovirus that causes hand-foot-and-mouth disease enters the brain and causes serious complications:

    •Viral meningitis. This is a rare infection and inflammation of the membranes (meninges) and cerebrospinal fluid surrounding the brain and spinal cord.

    You can lower your child's risk of hand-foot-and-mouth disease in many ways:

    •Wash hands often. Wash your hands for at least 20 seconds. Be sure to wash your hands after using the toilet or changing a diaper. Also, wash your hands before preparing or eating food and after blowing your nose, sneezing or coughing. When soap and water aren't available, use hand sanitizer.

    •Teach good hygiene. Show your children how to wash their hands and help them do it often. Show them how to practice overall good hygiene. Explain to them why it's best not to put their fingers, hands or any other objects in their mouths.

    •Disinfect common areas. Clean high-traffic areas and surfaces first with soap and water. Next, clean with a diluted solution of chlorine bleach and water. If you're in a child care setting, follow a strict schedule of cleaning and disinfecting. The virus can live for days on surfaces in common areas, including on door knobs, and on shared items such as toys.

    •Avoid close contact. Because hand-foot-and-mouth disease is highly contagious, people with the illness should limit their exposure to others while they have symptoms. Keep children with hand-foot-and-mouth disease out of their child care setting or school until fever is gone and mouth sores have healed. If you have the illness, stay home from work.

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    •Mayo Clinic Q and A: Hand, foot and mouth disease

    •Mayo Clinic Minute: Hand, foot and mouth disease in kids

  3. Hand, foot and mouth disease is a viral illness that mainly affects children, generally under age 10. It causes sores in the mouth, on the hands, feet, and sometimes buttocks and genital areas. Some people also refer to it as herpangina.

  4. May 7, 2024 · Hand, foot, and mouth disease (HFMD) is common in children under 5 years old, but anyone can get it. The illness is usually not serious, but it is very contagious. To prevent spreading HFMD, wash your hands often, clean and disinfect surfaces, and avoid close contact with others.

  5. Your hand is the claw that grabs and holds prizes, and your wrist is the mechanical joint that lets the claw move up and down, and side to side. Hand and wrist anatomy. The parts that make up your hand and wrist are layered upon each other to form a three-dimensional shape that gives them the ability to move and function.

  6. Nov 26, 2019 · Supination and pronation are terms used to describe the up or down orientation of your hand, arm, or foot. What it means can depend on which part of the body it describes. When your palm or...

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