Jalapenos & Skin Burns

Jalapeno peppers are the food of the brave. The heat of a jalapeno can add a kick to food but a lasting burn to your skin. Although these burns do dissipate on their own, the experience can range from uncomfortable to extremely painful, particularly with certain varieties of pepper.

Lauren Fitzpatrick
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How to Treat an Acid Skin Burn

Like most caustic chemicals, when acids contact the skin, they cause damage in the form of a burn. Acid burns frequently occur in the home or at work. It is important to treat acid burns correctly because otherwise, the chemicals can continue to damage the skin after the first contact, explains the Merck Manual.

Contributing Writer
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Home Remedies for Minor Chemical Burns

Chemical burns occur when skin comes into contact with chemicals resulting in irritation, bumps or blisters. Longer exposure to chemicals can cause a reaction in the body. First aid is the first line of defense in treating minor chemical burns. There are home remedies that can minimize the damage and treat the burns.

Shemiah Williams
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How to Heal an Internal Mouth Burn

Misjudging the temperature of a hot cup of coffee or slurp of soup may require you to pay the painful consequences for days or weeks. As long as the burn in your mouth is mild, all you need to do is take steps to soothe your discomfort until the sensitive tissue heals on its own.

Christa Miller
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How to Treat Tanning Bed Burn

Red skin and pain after a tanning bed session indicate some degree of tissue damage. In fact, burns and other tanning bed injuries send approximately 3,200 Americans to the emergency room every year, according to a 2014 report by the U.S. Surgeon General.

Marcy Brinkley
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Healing Chemical Burned Skin

Chemical burns, although painful, are typically not serious. Common causes of chemical burns include tile cleaners, car battery acids, drain cleaners, gasoline, oxidizers or wet and dry cement.

Rose Welton
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How to Heal a Light Skin Burn

A light skin burn would be classified as first-degree and affect only the outer layer of skin. Symptoms of a first-degree burn include reddening, some swelling and pain. If your burn blisters, it has moved beyond the first-degree stage into second-degree.

Darla Ferrara
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Treatments for Hair Dye Burns on Skin

Chemical burns to the scalp and skin can occur when dying or highlighting hair. Hair dye strips the hair of natural pigment, and replaces the color with a synthetic colorant. Minor irritation and redness is common, but severe burns deep into the skin have not been commonly reported.

Julie Hampton
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Home Remedy for Stove Burns

A burn injury, such as contact with a heated stove burner, may take some time to heal and may leave a scar. Burns are classified by how much tissue is affected and how deep they are. First-degree burns are associated with skin reddening, little pain and mild swelling.

Frank Dioso
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How to Soothe Burns

Whether it's from staying out too long in the sun or accidentally touching a hot pot handle, minor thermal burns are a common occurrence among adults and children. In the US, the Centers for Disease Control estimates that 1.

Kat Long
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How to Accelerate Skin Growth for Burn Wounds

If you expose your skin to high heat, such as a boiling pot of water or a hot automobile part on your car, your skin may become burned and leave you with a painful, tender wound. Your skin will naturally heal itself over time, but the proper after-care and treatment can help accelerate healing and skin re-growth.

Joshua Duvauchelle
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Uses for Silver Sulfadiazine Cream

Silver sulfadiazine cream is a sulfa drug that kills bacteria and yeast organisms that cause wound infections, particularly in severe burns or where dead tissue may be present. Silver sulfadiazine is for topical application only. It is typically applied in a layer 3 to 5 mm thick.

Fern Fischer
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