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Hands itching

Skin Irritation. Fine broken filaments often irritate the skin, occasionally causing transient itching and rashes. The back of hands and wrists and neck areas tend to be most sensitive. Protective clothing and barrier skin creams help prevent the fiber from reaching the skin and causing discomfort. [Pg.7]

Notify the physician if bleeding at affected area, hoarseness, hives, rash, severe itching, difficulty breathing or swallowing, or swelling of the face, throat, lips, eyes, hands, feet, or ankles occurs... [Pg.1015]

Two men stopped in the doorway a bespectacled, sallow-faced doctor and one of those Olympian ex-Spetsnaz types, who looked like he d been built out of rubble from the more unsightly sections of the Berlin Wall. Both men raised their hands, the big bastard loading his eyes with all kinds of death-threats, itching to try something - given the chance. [Pg.118]

Tartazine (yellow pigment), on the other hand, may cause typical histamine poisoning symptoms, such as reduced blood pressure, increased heart rate, skin hyperemia, itching, nettle rash, and runny nasal discharge. The symptoms occur due to degranulation of a large number of mastocytes as a result of ion imbalance, such as tartazine chelates zinc ions. [Pg.21]

After taking the elixir, if your face and body itch as though insects were crawling over them, if your hands and feet swell with dropsy, if you cannot stand the smell of food and bring it up when you eat it, if you feel sick, if your limbs are weak, if you are prone to diarrhoea or vomiting, these are merely proofs that the elixir is succeeding in driving out the illness. [Pg.85]

Acute renal failure that persisted for 10 days was observed in a 19-month-old child who ingested an unknown amount of powdered mercuric chloride (Samuels et al. 1982). Several children who were treated with medications containing mercurous chloride for constipation, worms, or teething discomfort exhibited flushing of the palms of the hands and soles of the feet (Warkany and Hubbard 1953). The flushing was frequently accompanied by itching, swelling, and desquamation of these areas. [Pg.335]

As already described, pruritus is an obvious sensory feature of many different external and internal sources. The motor response that the sensation of itching evokes (i.e., scratching with the nails of the hands or feet), if not controlled, often perpetuates and intensifies the symptom and may lead to serious skin damage (e.g., abrasion, laceration, lichenification [skin thickening]), thereby reducing the ability of the skin to fimction as... [Pg.116]


See other pages where Hands itching is mentioned: [Pg.353]    [Pg.353]    [Pg.319]    [Pg.1208]    [Pg.1285]    [Pg.511]    [Pg.156]    [Pg.579]    [Pg.509]    [Pg.300]    [Pg.741]    [Pg.509]    [Pg.393]    [Pg.216]    [Pg.306]    [Pg.415]    [Pg.305]    [Pg.15]    [Pg.29]    [Pg.44]    [Pg.95]    [Pg.304]    [Pg.988]    [Pg.206]    [Pg.155]    [Pg.191]    [Pg.455]    [Pg.134]    [Pg.726]    [Pg.2503]    [Pg.2983]    [Pg.215]    [Pg.198]    [Pg.37]    [Pg.140]    [Pg.180]    [Pg.301]    [Pg.336]    [Pg.360]    [Pg.467]    [Pg.62]    [Pg.1219]    [Pg.113]    [Pg.189]   


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