Atopic Eczema
Atopic eczema is the most common form of eczema and is identified by skin inflammation that causes the associated symptoms. Atopic is just a description for specific allergic tendencies some people may have. However, having atopic eczema is not in itself the same has having a simple allergic type of condition as people with this also have a larger risk of developing other types of atopic conditions like hay fever or asthma.
Atopic eczema has a few symptoms that are related to it. These include dry skin, red inflammation, itchiness where the skin is inflamed, blisters on the inflamed region, and sometimes infections may occur. The most commonly affected regions of the skin when it becomes inflamed are skin creases like those which are found in front of the wrists and elbows, behind the knees and around the neck area. This isn’t to say other areas of skin cannot become affected.

Atopic Eczema
Sufferers tend to find that inflamed areas have a tendency to flare up on occasions then seem to settle down. Obviously the duration and severity of the “attacks” varies in different people.
People with eczema usually suffer mild cases, where flare ups may cause just a couple of areas of inflammation and only occur occasionally, or sever cases where attacks can stretch for several weeks, covering large areas of the skin. It is normal for people with atopic eczema to be somewhere in the middle of these two extremes.






























