Athletes foot??????!


Question: Athletes foot!?!?!?!?!?!?
please help!.!.!.
i have BAD athletes foot!.!.!. i use the cream twice a day so creme isnt an option!.

is there any perscription to help to go away!. it burns and itchs like crazy 24/7!Www@Answer-Health@Com


Answers:
Sock it to 'em!. "Whenever you take off or put on your socks, it's a good practice to rub a sock up and down your toe webs," says Rodney Basler, M!.D!., a dermatologist and assistant professor of internal medicine at the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha!. "That keeps the areas between your toes dry, which is essential in preventing and treating athlete's foot!."

Get cooking with baking soda!. Baking soda is a cheaper alternative to expensive foot powders, yet it does essentially the same thing!. Either sprinkle it on dry or make a paste by moistening one tablespoon of baking soda with lukewarm water, suggests Suzanne M!. Levine, D!.P!.M!., a clinical assistant podiatrist at the Wycoff Heights Medical Center and adjunct clinical instructor at New York College of Podiatric Medicine, both in New York City!. Rub the mixture on your feet and between your toes!. After about 15 minutes, rinse it off and dry thoroughly!.

The answer is blowin' from your dryer!. "Use your hair dryer on your feet to dry them more effectively than you can with a towel," adds Dr!. Basler "And blowing air from your hair dryer into your shoes is a good way to dry them out after you wear them!."

Find relief in sheep's clothing!. "Placing lamb's wool between the tips of your toes (after removing your shoes) allows air to reach the affected skin, which helps make conditions less favorable for fungal growth," says Dr!. Ramsey!. So if the day's almost over and you can kick back for a while, prop up your bare feet with some lamb's wool between your toes!.

Put on some antiperspirant!. "Rubbing or spraying antiperspirant on your feet can keep them from sweating," says Dr!. Basler!. "You can use the same brand you use on your underarms!. As long as it contains aluminum chlorohydrate, the active drying ingredient, it will work!."

Disinfect your shoes!. Neal Kramer, D!.P!.M!., a Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, podiatrist, says that Lysol and other household disinfectants can kill off any living fungus spores!. After you take off your shoes, rub the insides with a cloth or paper towel that has a dab of disinfectant!. (Then use that hair dryer to dry out the insides of the shoes!)

The right solution: Don't use creams!. Antifungal creams have the right ingredients but the wrong way of presenting them!. "The problem with creams is that they help trap moisture, especially between toes," says Dr!. Basler!. "Solutions are much better than creams!." Note: While solutions are more effective for remedying, creams can be used to help prevent athlete's foot!.

Use the power in powder!. If you're going with an over-the-counter powder--the most common remedy--Dr!. Ramsey says some of the best are Zeasorb-AF, Desenex, Tinactin and Micatin!. "I recommend against using cornstarch, because it sometimes sets you up for a yeast infection," adds Dr!. Basler, who, also recommends Mycelex as a nonprescription remedy!.

Foot brine is fine!. A mixture of two teaspoons of salt per pint of warm water provides a foot soak that zaps excess perspiration and hampers fungus growth, says Glenn Copeland, D!.P!.M!., who is podiatrist for the Toronto Blue jays professional baseball team and a staff member at the Toronto Women's College Hospital!. Simply soak your feet for five to ten minutes at a time, repeating often until the condition clears!. Added bonus: This saline solution helps soften the affected area, so antifungal medications can penetrate deeper for better results!.

Remove dead skin!. When your condition starts to improve, remove any dead skin!. According to Frederick Hass, M!.D!., a general practitioner in San Rafael, California, and author of The Foot Book, dead skin houses fungus that can reinfect you!. To remove it, use a bristled scrub brush on the entire foot and a baby bottle "nipple brush" on toe webs!. And brush in the shower, so the dead skin goes down the drain without touching other parts of your body!.

Be a shoe swapper!. "In theory, you're supposed to wear a pair of shoes only once every five days in order to allow shoes to really dry out between wearings," adds Dr!. Basler!. "If people don't have enough shoes to do that, I suggest that they wear different pairs as often as possible!."

Is It Really Athlete's Foot!?
You may be able to run like the wind, pump iron until it rusts and make

your heartbeat faster than Dan Cupid's target practice, but even the most versatile jock-of-all-trades is a lousy Marcus Welby when it comes to diagnosing athlete's foot!. "A lot of people who think they have athlete's foot actually have

another condition--usually eczema, dermatitis or some kind of allergic reaction to their shoes," says Rodney Basler, M!.D!., a dermatologist and assistant professor of internal medicine at the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha!. "One way to tell if it's really athlete's foot is if there's an infection in the toe web between your fourth and fifth toe--your 'ring' toe and pinkie!. If it's not there, the problem is usually not athlete's foot!." It's also not athletes foot if:

The infection is identical on both feet!. "Then it's probably eczema or an allergic reaction to your shoes," says Dr!. Basler!.
It's only on the top of your toes!. "Contact dermatitis may be caused by shoe material," he adds!.
It occurs on a child below the age of puberty!. Athlete's foot rarely strikes before adolescence!.
The foot is red, swollen, blistered and sore!. Again, severe dermatitis is the likely culprit!.Www@Answer-Health@Com

girls catch athletes foot!? wow you learn somethin new everydayWww@Answer-Health@Com





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