1. Emotional abnormalities
From emotional changes, you can tell whether your baby may be sick. After his needs are met, healthy babies are full of energy, have good eyes, do not cry or make trouble, and are easy to adapt to the environment, but sick children are often emotional abnormal.

Baby becoming irritable, red complexion, and dry lips are often signs of fever. However, sluggish eyesight, direct eyes, and clenched fists are often signs of convulsions; weak crying or not crying often indicates a serious condition. In addition to the obvious signs above, the baby may also show malaise, restlessness or tantrums.
2. Appetite changes
Healthy children can eat regularly and their appetite is relatively stable. If you find a decrease in appetite, a sudden increase in appetite or refusal to eat, it is often a precursor to the baby's illness. For example, peptic ulcer, chronic enteritis, tuberculosis, low liver function, parasitic disease, ascariasis, hookworm disease, etc. may cause loss of appetite. Z1z

zinc deficiency, vitamin A or D poisoning may also cause low appetite. The appetite change of sick babies is not only reflected in poor appetite, some diseases can also increase appetite, the most typical example is childhood diabetes, eat more and eat more, not enough to eat, even if you eat more, the weight still does not increase. drop.
3. Poor sleep
Normal babies generally fall asleep faster, sleep peacefully, sleep in a natural posture, breathe evenly, and look freely. Sick babies usually have poor sleep at night, such as less sleep, easy waking, and restless sleep. Irritability before going to bed, kicking the quilt during sleep, redness of the face after waking up, and shortness of breath may be fever. If you keep chewing and grinding your teeth before and after going to bed, you may be too excited or have roundworm infection before going to bed.

4. Hyperhidrosis
Physiological baby's hyperhidrosis is common in hot weather, high room temperature, thick clothes and quilt, etc., and some sweat all over the body or sweating on the forehead when eating or breastfeeding. These are all normal. phenomenon. In addition, babies have a strong metabolism, are active, and sweat more than adults. And pathological sweating often occurs when babies are in a quiet or sleeping state, such as when they are lying flat or sleeping, they may also sweat profusely or unstoppable.