An eight-month-old baby suddenly starts to pull their limbs, clench their fists, and turn beet red in the face, which could be a sign of a urinary tract infection or insufficient calcium and vitamin D in digestion.
There can be many reasons for a baby’s night crying, including wet diapers, overheating or undercooling, pinworm infection, or calcium deficiency. It’s important to carefully observe and may require related checks.
Babies may be startled awake during their nap due to a lack of certain trace elements or poor digestion, among other reasons.
Your baby sleeps a lot during the day but is lively at night. What should you do?
24-month-old disease/symptom: Baby sneezing blood at night. Your baby is sneezing blood at night, can’t breathe through the nose, has a bit of a cold these days, and had a slight fever yesterday. Blood in the nose in infants is often attributed to nasal inflammation causing mucosal rupture. Sometimes, the guidance isn’t wrong: I suggest you continue to actively treat the baby’s cold, which may lead to nosebleeds after a fever. Observe the baby’s mental state. It’s good. He was fine before going to bed last night, but he started sneezing blood that night. Until now, he’s been feeling uncomfortable. It seems like he might have a cold, and his nasal mucosa isn’t doing well.
Babies often wake up crying from excessive scare, which may be due to reduced nerve sensitivity caused by a lack of calcium.
A three-year-old baby’s three fingers on the right hand have suddenly become swollen and hard. Could it be a sign of illness? How should it be treated?
This child cries and screams at night, but he’s not fully awake! Clearly, winning your eyes and posture won’t wake him up! Ten minutes later, I fell asleep again! What happened?
Why do children have bad breath, and how can it be solved?
Frequent blinking in children may be related to overuse of the eyes or an allergic constitution.