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The word ring worm used for this disease
does not correctly describe it. For, the disease is not
caused by any worm but by a fungus which is a very minute
form of vegetable plant life that grows on the skin.
The disease is more annoying than dangerous. It is
serious only when the skin breaks up due to scratching
and this leads to secondary infection.Symptoms
Ringworm infection
occurs in the scalp, the body, the feet and the nails.
Ringworm of the scalp is most common in children, because
of the lack of protective fatty acids in their scalps.
These fatty acids are produced only in adult life and
make the scalp of an adult person resistant to ringworm
infection. The infection is more frequent in boys than in
girls because boys have shorter hair and the scalp is
relatively less protected.
The disease spreads on the skin and extends deeper into
the hair roots and also up along the hair. The affected
hair becomes dull and breaks off near its root. This
leaves bald spots on the scalp which may assume a shabby
appearance on account of the raised grey scales that
protrude from the infected areas. The patches of ringworm
on the body are usually round or oval with raised pink
and scaly rings which show a clean space in the centre.
The itching in the infected part helps to spread
infection through the nails to other healthy parts of the
body. If it is not treated for a long time, the infection
becomes chronic and is, then, difficult to get rid of.
Ringworm of the body commonly affects the face and the
neck. Ringworm of the feet, also known as the
atheletes foot is more prevalent in
summer. Infection is conveyed from one person to another
through common usage of bath mats, bath tubs and swimming
pools. The fungus, which causes the ringworm to grow
easily in the warm and moist parts of the body, thrives
between the toes. It finds a suitable place to live on
account of perspiration in this region.
Causes
Ringworm is passed
from an infected child to a healthy one through contact.
It may also spread through the use of articles such as
towels soap of the infected child. Sometimes, it is
spread by infected domestic animals, such as dogs and
cats.
Treatment
The use of
suppressive lotions or ointments for the treatment of
ringworm may give temporaory relief but does not
eradicate the root of the disease. The best way to deal
with this disease is to cleanse the blood stream and the
body.
To begin with, the child should be placed on an all-fruit
diet for two or three days. He should take fresh juicy
fruits, such as apple,orange, papaya, pineapple and
pomegranate, during this period. This will help eliminate
morbid matter from the body and lead to substantial
improvement, a warm-water enema may be administered
during this period to cleanse the bowels, if possible.
Fruits, salt-free, raw or steamed vegetables accompanied
with whole wheat chappatis may be taken after the
all-fruit diet. After a few days, curd and milk may be
added to the diet. The child- patient may thereafter
gradually embark upon a well-balanced diet according to
his age. The emphasis should be on whole grain cereals,
raw or lightly-cooked vegetables and fresh fruits. This
diet may be supplemented with vegetable oils, honey and
yeast.
The child should avoid tea, coffee, and all condiments
and highly flavoured dishes, as well as sugar, white
flour products, denatured cereals and tinned or bottled
foods.
Certain home remedies have been found beneficial in the
treatment of ringworm. One of the most effective of these
is the use of mustard (raye) seeds. A paste made from
these should be applied extgernally over the areas
affected with ringworm. Before application of this paste,
the skin should be washed thoroughly with hot water.
The use of new papaya has also been found beneficial in
the treatment of ringworm. A few slice of this unripe
fruit should be rubbed on the ringworm patches twice
daily. A paste made from dry seeds of papaya can also be
applied beneficially on these patches.
The use of castor (arandi) oil, is valuable in case of
ringworm of the head. This oil should be rubbed liberally
on the affected parts. Noticeable improvement will take
place within two or three days.
Raw vegetable juices, especially carrot juice in
combination with spinach juice, have proved beneficial in
the treatment of ringworm. The formula proportion
considered helpful in this combination are carrot juice
150 ml. and spinach 100 ml. to make 250 ml. of combined
juice.
The child-patient should get as much fresh air as
possible. He should drink plenty of water and bathe twice
daily. The skin with the exception of part affected with
ringworm, should be vigorously rubbed with the palms of
the hands before taking a bath.
Coconut oil may be applied to the portions affected with
rignworm. It will help the skin to stay soft. Sunbathing
is also beneficial and should be resorted to early in the
morning. A light mud pack applied over the sites of the
ringworm is also helpful. The pack should be applied for
half an hour twice daily.
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