Impetigohttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impetigo
Impetigo ose fa'ama'i pipisi e a'afia ai le pa'u papa'u. O le fa'aaliga sili ona taatele o pa'u samasama i foliga, lima, po'o vae. O manu'a atonu e tiga pe mageso, ae o le fiva e le masani ai.

Impetigo e masani ona mafua mai ile Staphylococcus aureus poo Streptococcus pyogenes. Pe a fa'afeso'ota'i e mafai ona sosolo solo po'o le va o tagata. I le tulaga o tamaiti, e pipisi atu i nai o latou tei.

O togafitiga e masani lava ile kulimi fa'ama'i e pei ole mupirocin po'o le fusidic acid. Antibiotic e ala ile gutu, e pei ole cefalexin, e mafai ona fa'aoga pe a a'afia vaega tetele.

Impetigo na aafia pe tusa ma le 140 miliona tagata (2% o le faitau aofaʻi o le lalolagi) i le 2010. E mafai ona tupu i soo se matua, ae sili ona taatele i tamaiti laiti. O fa'alavelave e ono aofia ai le cellulitis po'o le poststreptococcal glomerulonephritis.

Togafitiga - Vailaau OTC
* Talu ai o le impetigo o se faʻamaʻi pipisi, e le tatau ona faʻaaogaina suauʻu steroid. Afai e i ai sau fa'afitauli i le va'aiga o manu'a o le impetigo mai le eczemas, fa'amolemole ave se vaila'au fa'ama'i a le OTC e aunoa ma le fa'aogaina o su'u fa'ama'i.
#OTC antihistamine

* Fa'amolemole tu'u le suau'u fa'ama'i fa'ama'i ole OTC ile manu'a.
#Bacitracin
#Polysporin
☆ I le 2022 Stiftung Warentest i'uga mai Siamani, o le fa'amalieina o tagata fa'atau i ModelDerm sa na'o sina maualalo ifo nai lo fa'atalanoaga telemedicine totogi.
  • O se tulaga o le impetigo i le auvae. E tatau ona masalomia le Impetigo pe afai e leai se tala'aga o se manu'a o se tamaititi, ae o lo'o sosolo fa'amanu'a pei o manu'a.
  • E fa'apea o se fa'ama'i lona lua i tagata mama'i e maua i le atopic dermatitis.
  • E le pei o le atopic dermatitis, o le impetigo e manaʻomia togafitiga faʻamaʻi ma e mafai ona faʻaleagaina pe a faʻaaogaina vailaʻau faʻamaʻi.
  • O le ata o loʻo faʻaalia ai foliga pe a uma le paʻu o bullous impetigo ua pa.
  • E mafai ona fa'aseseina o le atopic dermatitis.
  • Bullous impetigo ― Pe a o faatasi ma ma'i ma'i ma'ale'ale ma'ale'ale, e iloa o le bullous impetigo.
References Impetigo: Diagnosis and Treatment 25250996
Impetigo is the most common bacterial skin infection in children two to five years of age. There are two principal types: nonbullous (70% of cases) and bullous (30% of cases). Nonbullous impetigo, or impetigo contagiosa, is caused by Staphylococcus aureus or Streptococcus pyogenes, and is characterized by honey-colored crusts on the face and extremities. Impetigo primarily affects the skin or secondarily infects insect bites, eczema, or herpetic lesions. Bullous impetigo, which is caused exclusively by S. aureus, results in large, flaccid bullae and is more likely to affect intertriginous areas. Both types usually resolve within two to three weeks without scarring, and complications are rare, with the most serious being poststreptococcal glomerulonephritis. Treatment includes topical antibiotics such as mupirocin, retapamulin, and fusidic acid. Oral antibiotic therapy can be used for impetigo with large bullae or when topical therapy is impractical. Amoxicillin/clavulanate, dicloxacillin, cephalexin, clindamycin, doxycycline, minocycline, trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole, and macrolides are options, but penicillin is not. Topical disinfectants are inferior to antibiotics and should not be used. Empiric treatment considerations have changed with the increasing prevalence of antibiotic-resistant bacteria, with methicillin-resistant S. aureus, macrolide-resistant streptococcus, and mupirocin-resistant streptococcus all documented. Fusidic acid, mupirocin, and retapamulin cover methicillin-susceptible S. aureus and streptococcal infections. Clindamycin proves helpful in suspected methicillin-resistant S. aureus infections. Trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole covers methicillin-resistant S. aureus infection, but is inadequate for streptococcal infection.
 Impetigo 28613693 
NIH
Impetigo ose fa'ama'i masani o le pa'u e mafua mai ni siama, e faigofie ona sosolo pe a fa'afeso'ota'i. E masani ona aliali mai e pei o ni pa'u mumu e ufiufi i se pa'u samasama ma e mafai ona mafua ai le mageso pe tiga. O lenei fa'ama'i e sili ona taatele i tamaiti e nonofo i nofoaga mafanafana ma susū. E mafai ona foliga mai o ni ma'i po'o le leai foi. E ui e masani ona afaina ai foliga, e mafai ona tupu i soo se mea e gau ai le paʻu. Ole su'esu'ega e fa'alagolago tele ile fa'ailoga ma foliga. Togafitiga masani e aofia ai vailaʻau faʻamaʻi, e le gata i luga ma tautala, faʻatasi ai ma le puleaina o faʻamaoniga.
Impetigo is a common infection of the superficial layers of the epidermis that is highly contagious and most commonly caused by gram-positive bacteria. It most commonly presents as erythematous plaques with a yellow crust and may be itchy or painful. The lesions are highly contagious and spread easily. Impetigo is a disease of children who reside in hot humid climates. The infection may be bullous or nonbullous. The infection typically affects the face but can also occur in any other part of the body that has an abrasion, laceration, insect bite or other trauma. Diagnosis is typically based on the symptoms and clinical manifestations alone. Treatment involves topical and oral antibiotics and symptomatic care.