The doctors were not much help. Our pediatrician, who had been practicing for 30 years, had never seen an ulcerated hemangioma before. He had no idea what we really needed, or how bad it really hurt our little baby. We had a couple seriously traumatic doctor visits.
In the photos there are some black areas around the edge of the yellow center -
this is area that had yet to ulcerate completely. The ulcer was still going to get bigger.
We started by using vaseline, gauze, and paper tape. THat is what the dermatologist told us to do. That is how ulcerated hemangiomas are typically treated. The picture above on the left is what happened to D's back after we took the tape off. Those red marks didn't fade away. And the tape didn't stick well because of all the vaseline. It was a mess.
One of the most important things we learned during this phase of ulceration is that yellow is good! It looked infected. An infection would have seriously been the worst thing that could have happened to the ulceration. And it looked infected. Even the pediatrician thought it might be and took a swab to send to the lab.
The yellow tissue is not infection. It's called granulation tissue, and it is the skin trying to grow back. Thanks, dermatologist, you could have told us that sooner!

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