dry and wet bandaging in childhood atopic eczema

Last reviewed 01/2018

  • occlusive medicated dressings and dry bandages should not be used to treat infected atopic eczema in children
  • NICE advise that:
    • localised medicated dressings or dry bandages can be used with emollients as a treatment for areas of chronic lichenified (localised skin thickening) atopic eczema in children
    • localised medicated dressings or dry bandages with emollients and topical corticosteroids can be used for short-term treatment of flares (7-14 days) or areas of chronic lichenified atopic eczema in children
    • whole-body (limbs and trunk) occlusive dressings (including wet wrap therapy) and whole-body dry bandages (including tubular bandages and garments) should not be used as first-line treatment for atopic eczema in children and should only be initiated by a healthcare professional trained in their use
    • whole-body (limbs and trunk) occlusive dressings (including wet wrap therapy) with topical corticosteroids should only be used to treat atopic eczema in children for 7-14 days (or for longer with specialist dermatological advice), but can be continued with emollients alone until the atopic eczema is controlled

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