@adriannejones88: December babies, drop your birthday date‼️ 😀 🎂

adrianne j ☮️
adrianne j ☮️
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Thursday 01 December 2022 13:24:43 GMT
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neasie2729
Neasie :
Dec 27
2022-12-01 18:11:34
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smooth.704.g
smooth :
ok it's our time. the 5th for me and I'm doing the Kodak black all month. . # step , step ,step
2022-12-02 00:53:36
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Stitch with: @Carolinestanbury   Not all eye swelling is created equal. 👀   A puffy eyelid in kids can come from something as simple as a bug bite, pink eye, or allergies. These are common, but in some cases it can also be a bacterial infection like periorbital cellulitis or, in rare but serious cases, orbital cellulitis.   Here’s why it matters: - Periorbital cellulitis affects the skin and tissue in front of the eye. It looks dramatic but is usually treatable with oral antibiotics if caught early. - Orbital cellulitis goes deeper-behind the protective barrier around the eye. That’s where muscles, nerves, and vision live. When that space gets infected, it’s a medical emergency.    🚨 Orbital cellulitis can spread quickly, even to the brain if left untreated. This is not a “wait and see” condition. If your child has a swollen eyelid and seems unusually clingy or irritable, refuses to open one eye, complains of pain with eye movement or changes in vision, has a fever, or just doesn’t look like themselves-trust your gut and get them checked right away.   And here’s the tricky part: early swelling can look similar no matter the cause. If your child’s symptoms worsen, don’t improve within 24–48 hours, or they suddenly refuse to open or move their eye, it’s time to seek care.   Big thanks to Caroline Stanbury for sharing her own story and raising awareness about a condition every parent should know about. 🙏   👉 Share this with another parent-because knowing the difference between “just pink eye” and something more serious can make all the difference.   Has your child ever had a swollen eyelid? What ended up being the cause? 👇
Stitch with: @Carolinestanbury   Not all eye swelling is created equal. 👀   A puffy eyelid in kids can come from something as simple as a bug bite, pink eye, or allergies. These are common, but in some cases it can also be a bacterial infection like periorbital cellulitis or, in rare but serious cases, orbital cellulitis.   Here’s why it matters: - Periorbital cellulitis affects the skin and tissue in front of the eye. It looks dramatic but is usually treatable with oral antibiotics if caught early. - Orbital cellulitis goes deeper-behind the protective barrier around the eye. That’s where muscles, nerves, and vision live. When that space gets infected, it’s a medical emergency.   🚨 Orbital cellulitis can spread quickly, even to the brain if left untreated. This is not a “wait and see” condition. If your child has a swollen eyelid and seems unusually clingy or irritable, refuses to open one eye, complains of pain with eye movement or changes in vision, has a fever, or just doesn’t look like themselves-trust your gut and get them checked right away.   And here’s the tricky part: early swelling can look similar no matter the cause. If your child’s symptoms worsen, don’t improve within 24–48 hours, or they suddenly refuse to open or move their eye, it’s time to seek care.   Big thanks to Caroline Stanbury for sharing her own story and raising awareness about a condition every parent should know about. 🙏   👉 Share this with another parent-because knowing the difference between “just pink eye” and something more serious can make all the difference.   Has your child ever had a swollen eyelid? What ended up being the cause? 👇

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