Formation of rubble or rubble in the digestive tract

Introduction

Introduction The patient removes his hair by hand or with iron clips and tweezers. The plucking site of the same patient is relatively fixed, but the plucking sites of different patients are different. More common in the top, frontal and occipital hair, but eyebrows, eyelashes, mane and pubic hair can also be affected. The hair that has been regenerated after being removed is still removed repeatedly. The scalp often has large hair loss, which is shaped like alopecia areata, but the boundaries are not uniform, and there are often hair loss and hair loss at the hair loss. Older patients deny their own plucking behavior. Hair plucking often occurs when bed rest, reading, watching TV, or doing homework, symptoms are either sustainable or intermittent.

Cause

Cause

Hair plucking is a common habit of children. It shows that children like or have no way to remove their hair without any reason, so that many hairs on the head are scarce, but also in eyebrows or body hair, but without other mental symptoms. The intelligence is normal. Some children may have anxiety or depression. More common in school-age children, both men and women can develop disease, but girls are more common.

The patient pulls out his normal growing hair with his fingers, and also winds his fingers around the fingers and then twists them off. Occasionally there are people who often pluck eyebrows. Adult patients also see their own beard, mane or pubic hair. The unplugged hair can grow again. Since this plucking behavior has formed a bad habit, it is pulled out after it grows out, and the hair is pulled out into pieces, forming a piece of bald spot, much like alopecia areata. The difference between alopecia areata and alopecia areata is that the margins are not as clear as alopecia areata. There are still many hairs on the bald plaque that are not unplugged. The hair around the bald spot is very strong, and the hair around the alopecia are often easily peeled off with a light pull. This type of baldness caused by hair plucking is often just a piece, often on the left side of the anterior head. Some patients use scissors to cut hair into pieces, called broken mites.

Examine

an examination

Related inspection

Ultrasound blood test for gastrointestinal diseases

The plucking of mites is a common cause of the formation of digestive tracts or shale. The patient removes his hair by hand or with iron clips and tweezers. The plucking site of the same patient is relatively fixed, but the plucking sites of different patients are different. More common in the top, frontal and occipital hair, but eyebrows, eyelashes, mane and pubic hair can also be affected. The hair that has been regenerated after being removed is still removed repeatedly. The scalp often has large hair loss, which is shaped like alopecia areata, but the boundaries are not uniform, and there are often hair loss and hair loss at the hair loss. Older patients deny their own plucking behavior. Hair plucking often occurs when bed rest, reading, watching TV, or doing homework, symptoms are either sustainable or intermittent. Some patients use both hands to tear the hair or use scissors to cut the hair, which is called trichckryptomania. The patient pulls and eats his own hair, called trichotillophagimania. The swallowed hair can cause abdominal pain, anorexia, constipation, formation of hairy stones or crypts in the digestive tract, leading to intestinal obstruction, intestinal perforation, intestinal bleeding, Complications such as acute pancreatitis and obstructive jaundice.

Diagnosis

Differential diagnosis

Hair plucking is a common habit of children. It shows that children like or have no way to remove their hair without any reason, so that many hairs on the head are scarce, but also in eyebrows or body hair, but without other mental symptoms. The intelligence is normal. Some children may have anxiety or depression. More common in school-age children, both men and women can develop disease, but girls are more common.

The patient pulls out his normal growing hair with his fingers, and also winds his fingers around the fingers and then twists them off. Occasionally there are people who often pluck eyebrows. Adult patients also see their own beard, mane or pubic hair. The unplugged hair can grow again. Since this plucking behavior has formed a bad habit, it is pulled out after it grows out, and the hair is pulled out into pieces, forming a piece of bald spot, much like alopecia areata. The difference between alopecia areata and alopecia areata is that the margins are not as clear as alopecia areata. There are still many hairs on the bald plaque that are not unplugged. The hair around the bald spot is very strong, and the hair around the alopecia are often easily peeled off with a light pull. This type of baldness caused by hair plucking is often just a piece, often on the left side of the anterior head. Some patients use scissors to cut hair into pieces, called broken mites.

The plucking of mites is a common cause of the formation of digestive tracts or shale. The patient removes his hair by hand or with iron clips and tweezers. The plucking site of the same patient is relatively fixed, but the plucking sites of different patients are different. More common in the top, frontal and occipital hair, but eyebrows, eyelashes, mane and pubic hair can also be affected. The hair that has been regenerated after being removed is still removed repeatedly. The scalp often has large hair loss, which is shaped like alopecia areata, but the boundaries are not uniform, and there are often hair loss and hair loss at the hair loss. Older patients deny their own plucking behavior. Hair plucking often occurs when bed rest, reading, watching TV, or doing homework, symptoms are either sustainable or intermittent. Some patients use both hands to tear the hair or use scissors to cut the hair, which is called trichckryptomania. The patient pulls and eats his own hair, called trichotillophagimania. The swallowed hair can cause abdominal pain, anorexia, constipation, formation of hairy stones or crypts in the digestive tract, leading to intestinal obstruction, intestinal perforation, intestinal bleeding, Complications such as acute pancreatitis and obstructive jaundice.

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