Cradle CapGreasy, yellowish and scaly crust on the scalp of an infant or baby.
Seborrhoeic dermatitis, commonly known as cradle cap, is a condition of the skin (usually on a baby's scalp) which causes crusting, scaling, and discolouration. It usually disappears during the baby's first year.
A form of seborrhea, like dandruff, commonly found in infants, cradle cap is an inflammatory scaling disease of the scalp. Scales and/or flakes can appear in the eyebrows, around the nose and behind the ear.
A waxy, scaly, skin rash that is common in newborn infants. The medical name is seborrhoeic dermatitis
a dermatitis of the scalp that is common in infants
seborrheic dermatitis of the scalp in infancy.
A common minor skin complaint in newborn and young babies caused by a build-up of scaly skin in the scalp.
A name for seborrheic dermatitis, a condition of the skin (usually on an infant's head) that causes crusting, scaling, and discoloration. Usually disappears in the first couple years of an infant's life.
a form of seborrheic dermatitis characterized by crusty, scaly skin on your baby's scalp. Cradle cap usually doesn't appear in children older than 1 year.
A condition characterised by a patchy, thick yellowish crust on the scalp of the baby's head.
A harmless, waxy scale on an infant's scalp that can be removed with baby oil and a fine-toothed comb.
Cradle Cap (infantile or neonatal seborrhoeic dermatitis, also known as crusta lactea, milk crust, honeycomb disease) is a yellowish, patchy, greasy, scaly and crusty skin rash that occurs on the scalp of recently born babies. It is usually not itchy, and does not bother the baby. Cradle cap can occur in any baby, and most commonly begins sometime in the first 3 months.