Topic Overview
What is hand-foot-and-mouth disease?
Hand-foot-and-mouth disease is a common childhood illness. It causes
sores in the mouth and on the hands, feet, and sometimes the buttocks and legs.
Mouth sores can be painful and may make it hard for your child to eat. The
disease is not serious, and it usually goes away in a week or so.
It can occur at any time of year, but hand-foot-and-mouth disease is most
common in the summer and fall.
Hand-foot-and-mouth disease is
not the same as other diseases that have similar names:
foot-and-mouth disease (sometimes called
hoof-and-mouth disease) or
mad cow disease. These diseases almost always occur in
animals.
What causes hand-foot-and-mouth disease?
Hand-foot-and-mouth disease is caused by a virus called an
enterovirus.
The virus spreads easily
through coughing and sneezing. You can also get it by coming in contact with
infected stool, such as when you change a diaper. Often the disease breaks out
within a community. Children are most likely to spread the disease during the
first week of the illness. But the virus stays in the stool and can sometimes
spread to others for several months after the blisters and sores have
healed.
It usually takes 3 to 6 days for a person to get symptoms
of hand-foot-and-mouth disease after being exposed to the virus. This is called
the incubation period.
What are the symptoms?
At first your child may
feel tired, get a sore throat, or have a fever of around
101°F (38°C) to
103°F (39°C). Then in a day or
two, your child may get sores or blisters on the hands, feet, mouth, and
sometimes the buttocks. In some cases a child will get a skin rash before the
blisters appear. The blisters may break open and crust over. The sores and
blisters usually go away in a week or so.
How is hand-foot-and-mouth disease diagnosed?
A
doctor can tell if your child has hand-foot-and-mouth disease by the symptoms
you describe and by looking at the sores and blisters.
How is it treated?
Hand-foot-and-mouth disease
does not usually need treatment. Most cases go away in 7 to 10 days. You can
use home care to help relieve your child’s symptoms.
- Offer your child plenty of cool fluids. Your
child may also have Popsicles and ice cream.
- Do not give your child
acidic or spicy foods and drinks, such as salsa or orange juice. These foods
can make mouth sores more painful.
- For pain and fever, give your
child acetaminophen (such as Tylenol) or ibuprofen (such as Advil). Do
not give your child aspirin. It has been linked to
Reye's syndrome, a serious illness.
To help prevent the disease from spreading:
- Teach all family members to wash their hands
often. It is especially important to wash your hands after you change the
diaper of an infected child. This is because the virus may stay in the stool
for several months after the blisters heal.
- Do not let your child
share toys or give kisses while he or she is infected.
- If your
child goes to day care or school, talk to the staff about when your child can
return.
- Wear latex or rubber gloves when you apply any lotion,
cream, or ointment to your child's blisters.
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