eh iya, kelupaan.

yang pasti JANGAN pakai air ludah untuk ngebersihin belek ya.
ckckckckckc.....

2009/11/3 Gopina Goham <alfin.b...@gmail.com>

> Makasiy ya, mbak, u/ artikel2nya.
>
> Pada intinya, saluran airmata bayi msh lom sempurna. Makanya suka
> belekan. Diseka dengan handuk/kain bersih yg dikasih air hangat.
> Pelan2 dibersihkan,trus dimassage bagian pangkal batang hidung u/
> melancarkan keluarnya kotoran/airmata.
>
> ASI gak bahaya ke kulit bayi ah. Kalau panas, ya lidahnya bayi akan
> keslomot (maaf,bahasa jawa) dong, hehehe... Yang namanya abis minum,
> baik asi/sufor,sebaiknya ya diseka. Biar bersih. Klopun bruntusan,
> cukup dibersihkan dengan diseka handuk/lap basah.
>
> On 11/2/09, agitaspor...@yahoo.com <agitaspor...@yahoo.com> wrote:
> > Ini forward-an dari milis lain, maaf kalau kepanjangan penjelasannya,
> bahasa
> > inggris pula....
> > Hehehehe...
> > Smoga berkenan.
> > Kalau anggota milis ada yg dokter mungkin bisa bantu untuk lebih
> jelasnya.
> >
> > Regardz
> > Agita
> >
> > "Apply mother's milk. Mothers taught me about the antibiotic value of
> breast
> > milk many years ago. It's an effective home remedy, if you are
> > breastfeeding. Around six times a day, express a couple drops of your
> milk
> > onto the tip of a clean finger and place them in the nasal corner of his
> > draining eye. Each drop of your milk contains millions of
> infection-fighting
> > white blood cells and natural antibacterial substances. And, it is kinder
> to
> > sensitive little eyes than prescription drugs."
> >
> > =====
> > Ask Dr. Sears: Newborn Eye Discharge By Dr. William Sears, Parenting
> William
> > Sears, M.D.
> >
> > Q. My week-old newborn has pus or what some people may call "sleep crust"
> > coming out of his right eye, much more than the other eye. Every time he
> > wakes up, it's crusted so that he can't even open his eye. I am just
> > wondering if it could be allergies or an infection. We are going to bring
> > him to the doctor, but I thought maybe you can give some general input on
> > what could be causing this?
> >
> > A. Your newborn has an easily treatable problem called a blocked tear
> duct.
> > It's very common -- I see this condition with nearly half of the newborns
> in
> > my pediatric practice. There are tiny tear ducts that normally drain the
> > tears from the eyes into the cavities near the nose. Sometimes these tiny
> > tear ducts are not completely open at birth or become clogged later on.
> > Excess tears then well up in the eyes. As a general principle of the
> human
> > body, if fluid can't normally drain, like water in a stagnant pond, it
> can
> > get infected. This is what has happened in your baby. Here's how you and
> > your doctor can. clear up this condition.
> > Wash away the drainage. Using clear water on a clean, soft cloth, gently
> > wipe the yellow discharge out of your baby's eyes. Do this several times
> a
> > day or as often as necessary.
> > Massage the tear ducts. The tear ducts lie just beneath
> >
> > the nasal corner of the eyes. If they are very blocked, you can often
> feel a
> > bump where the corners of the eyelids converge. Using the tip of a
> > well-scrubbed finger, gently massage this area moving your fingertip in a
> > semi-circle from the corner of the eye inward toward the nose. Do this
> for
> > around five to ten strokes at least six times a day. Make it part of your
> > daily routine, before every diaper change for instance. Putting gentle
> > pressure on the fluid-filled tear duct will often force the fluid through
> > the clogged passages and open them up.
> > Apply mother's milk. Mothers taught me about the antibiotic value of
> breast
> > milk many years ago. It's an effective home remedy, if you are
> > breastfeeding. Around six times a day, express a couple drops of your
> milk
> > onto the tip of a clean finger and place them in the nasal corner of his
> > draining eye. Each drop of your milk contains millions of
> infection-fighting
> > white blood cells and natural antibacterial substances. And, it is kinder
> to
> > sensitive little eyes than prescription drugs.
> > See the doctor. If these remedies don't clear up the discharge, your
> doctor
> > may prescribe an antibacterial ointment or drops to be used four times a
> day
> > until the tear duct opens and no further discharge occurs. Your doctor
> will
> > probably advise you to use the prescription medicine in addition to all
> the
> > above home remedies. On each routine well-baby checkup, report the status
> of
> > your baby's tear-duct drainage to your doctor.
> > As baby grows, so do his tiny tear ducts. Most blocked tear ducts open
> and
> > drain normally within a few weeks to a few months of using these home and
> > doctor-prescribed treatments. Occasionally, tear ducts may remain closed
> > because the nasal end of the ducts are sealed with membranous tissue. If
> > they haven't opened and are still not draining normally by the time your
> > baby is nine months old, your doctor may refer you to a pediatric eye
> > specialist for a procedure called tear-duct probing. This
> >
> > brief procedure is usually done in the doctor's office. A tiny wire is
> > inserted through the tear ducts to unclog the passages. While usually
> this
> > is done as a quick doctor's office procedure, sometimes in older babies
> it
> > is done on an outpatient basis in the hospital under a light, general
> > anesthesia.
> > http://www.parentin g.com/article/ Pregnancy/ Health/Ask- Dr-Sears-
> > Newborn-Eye- Discharge
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>
> --
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>

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