Lichen planus diagnosis raises questions

DEAR DR. GOTT: I am an 80-year-old female diagnosed with lichen planus. Other than being told it is an autoimmune disease, the dentists and doctors I have visited have no idea what to do with me. I have a white coating in my mouth on the bottom gums and occasionally break out with water blisters on my legs.

I am writing to you as a last resort for help. I have read on the computer that it is short-lived, but may come back. I have had it for three years now, and while it doesn’t always cause pain, it is annoying. Can you offer any suggestions or aid?

I once sent away for pills that were supposed to rid me of it, but they did nothing to help and they were expensive — $65 for a 30-day supply. I think they were some kind of herb.
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Food color effects stool color

DEAR DR. GOTT: My 45-year-old daughter told me that when she moves her bowels, the feces are a greenish color. What causes this?

DEAR READER: Variations in diet can lead to green stool. Green, leafy vegetables contain chlorophyll. Foods with purple coloring such as ice pops or gelatin desserts can turn stool rainbow colors. Foods rich in iron or iron supplements can also modify the color.

Bile is secreted in the small intestine and is green in color. Normally, the stool turns brown as it passes through the large intestine. However, if it passes faster than normal, it may be expelled while still green.
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Doc has patient’s number

DEAR DR. GOTT: I was wondering, after years of seeing my general practitioner, why he changed his policy to now demand my driver’s-license number for his files. I feel this is an invasion of my privacy.

With that last bit of information, I am now not in charge of the protection of my privacy. He is subject to office break-ins, unhappy employees, theft, loss of disks or whatever forms the information is stored on to hackers. Why do they need anything more than an address and Social Security number?
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Yellow tongue has many causes

DEAR DR. GOTT: I am a 51-year-old female. I have a yellowish film on my tongue. I use a tongue cleaner along with a toothbrush with a tongue cleaner twice each day. What works best is scraping it with a toothpick. The film looks like cottage cheese. Please help me.

DEAR READER: There are several reasons for the tongue to turn yellow. Tobacco use, some medications, the ingestion of certain foods, geographic tongue (discolored regions of taste buds), yeast infection and bacteria on the tongue are a few reasons.
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A supplement for blood-pressure control?

DEAR DR. GOTT: Have you heard of the supplement Ameal bp for maintaining blood pressure within the normal range? If so, can it work successfully?

DEAR READER: Ameal consists of two bioactive tripeptides — valyl prolyl proline (VPP) and isoleucyl prolyl proline (IPP) — that are extracted from milk proteins. The product is purported to block biochemical reactions in the body that can cause blood vessels to narrow and result in rising hypertension. It should be used in conjunction with proper diet and regular exercise.
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Vinegar comes through, again

DEAR DR. GOTT: Your advice about distilled vinegar really works. I had a spot on my forehead my doctor told me wasn’t cancer — just to use creams to deal with it.

I started using vinegar 34 days ago, and the spot is completely healed. I have been applying it to a wart, and that is almost gone, too. This is to encourage you to continue writing your column. I can’t tell you how happy this makes me because I do not have this unsightly spot on my face, and I don’t need a surgeon. Thank you.

DEAR READER: It never ceases to amaze me when remedies are often found in a kitchen cupboard. As with many medications, I am sure distilled vinegar will not work successfully for everyone in curing warts and a plethora of other conditions. However, I’m glad it did for you. [Read more...]

Cluster headaches debilitating

DEAR DR. GOTT: My 43-year-old son has cluster headaches that began about five years ago. The first series was twice daily at about the same time each day. The bout lasted between six and eight weeks, and then stopped.

Two years later, they returned once daily. His doctor did an MRI that was normal and diagnosed him with cluster headaches. He was put on heavy doses of steroids that weren’t successful.

He recently began another series. They now occur once daily between 9 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. He went to a neurologist and tried several different medications that were unsuccessful. This time frame and duration fluctuates more, and he skipped two days twice. Pain medications don’t work.
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Ingrown Nail

Perhaps the most common condition seen in a podiatrist’s office is the ingrown toenail. In my practice, I have noticed this to occur most commonly in younger men but certainly there is a wide distribution of patient’s suffering from this condition. It is not as common to see this in the elderly.

Recalling that Androcles pulled a thorn from the lion’s paw illustrates how something as small as a thorn has the ability to incapacitate even the strongest and toughest. And while not quite a podiatrist and not quite an ingrown nail, the story’s point is made.

At the base of a nail are the cells that form the eventual nail. The toenail has a width just as your toe, itself, has margins in which the nail should grow. In many cases, the cause of ingrown nails is directly related to the manner in which the nail is cut. As the nail is cut, many patients are overly aggressive and cut the nail on an angle that allows the distal margin of the toe to fold in slightly. When the nail grows out, it bumps into the nail fold which becomes inflamed and uncomfortable. Of course trauma and some irregularities of the cellular configuration are not uncommon causes that contribute to this condition.

At this point I would like to make the distinction between an ingrowing nail and an ingrown nail. An in ingrowing nail, connoting an action in progress, is a sub-acute but sore area of the toe where the nail is pressing on the skin fold. The toe hurts more when pressure is applied but otherwise, doesn’t feel too bad unless something hits it. There is redness and localized tenderness all associated with inflammation. In contrast, an ingrown nail is one in which the nail has broken the soft tissue of the skin fold and is often accompanied by drainage, warmth, increased pain, with or without pressure and a localized and sometimes systemic infection.

When presented with the mildly tender ingrowing nail, it is often easy enough to cut the nail back just proximal to the point of tenderness, being sure to round the edges of the remaining nail edge. Most often, there is near complete relief after the nail section has been removed. I often recommend warm saline soaks and the application of vasoline or Neosporin in the groove that remained.

Generally speaking, an ingrown nail is too tender to remove without the benefit of a local anesthetic. Once the toe is numb, a vertical section of the nail is removed whereby enough of the underlying wound is free of pressure and the full wound margins are visible. It is important that the wound has enough time to heal before the new nail grows back over it. Again, warm, saline soaks are recommended and a light dressing is applied as needed.

The place for antibiotics with these wounds should be on per patient basis. Many patients have been placed on drugs before I ever see them. They relate improvement while on the medication but recurrence after they have stopped. The key here is not the antibiotics but the removal of the offending nail. The nail, itself, acts as portal of entry for bacteria directly into the wound. Until the nail is removed, the wound is prone to reinfection.

When there is recurrence of an ingrown nail, a permanent procedure to selectively eliminate the margin of the offending nail can be performed in the office. It is performed under a local anesthetic and only requires about 15 minutes. The post-operative course is relatively short and the success rate approaches 100%.

As common as the ingrown nail is, avoidance of it seems relatively simple. You must use the appropriate instruments, avoid vertical cutting of the nail and round all nail edges.

Andrew E Schwartz, D.P.M.
51 Hospital Hill Road
Sharon, CT 06069
860 364 5944

88 Elm Street
Winsted, CT 06098
860 379 3100

Rose thorns can be dangerous

DEAR DR. GOTT: Last spring, I contracted rose-thorn disease. Very painful and extreme swelling occurred in just one finger. I was in the hospital for days under sedation and on antifungal meds. I’m still having stiffness and swelling in that finger now and then. When will this go away? I must say, everything is not coming up roses here.

DEAR READER: Rose-thorn (or rose gardener’s) disease has the technical name of sporothrix schenckii. It is a fungus that resides on hay, sphagnum mosses and the tips of rose thorns. It can cause infection, redness, swelling and open ulcers at the puncture site. The fungus can spread to the lymphatic system and move on to the joints and bones, where it ends up attacking the central nervous system and lungs when the thorn or thorns are deeply embedded.
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Fungal infection of the scalp

DEAR DR. GOTT: My dermatologist told me that I have a fungal infection in my scalp. He gave me a shampoo that didn’t help and also made my hair very dry and unhealthy looking. I am now beginning to lose my hair every time I brush and wash it. It comes out in strands and doesn’t grow. I’m getting a small bald spot in the front and don’t know what to do or where to turn. Can you please help me?

DEAR READER: Fungal scalp infections, also known as tinea capitis or ringworm of the scalp, are relatively common. Caused by a moldlike fungus, the condition is very contagious.

Symptoms include scalp itch, inflammation, pus-filled lesions, small black dots on the scalp and areas of the head that appear bald because the hair has literally broken off.
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