Chlorhexidine and dematitis (contact)

Nurses General Nursing

Updated:   Published

Hi,

I'm currently a nursing student in New Zealand.

During clinical placements in hospitals I have been using chlorhexidine to to wash my hands but have been experienicing contact dermatitis due to using it. It only takes about a day and my hands become itchy and small lumps appear. It resolves itself in about four days if I stop using chlorhexidine.

This only occurs on my hands but understandibly it is very frustrating indeed.

So I was wondering if there is anyone else who expereiences this and how they manage it?

And is there a product that is more suitable to use that won't cause this reaction in the clinical setting?

Thanks

Jeremy

Specializes in Med/Surg.

Is chlorhexidine common for washing your hands? What type of placement are you in? If you are on a regular floor, you shouldn't have to use chlorhexadine, that would indeed be too irritating and be overkill for the handwashing required. A regular antibacterial handwash or waterless alcohol hand gel should suffice. We use chlorhexadine to scrub pt's for IV starts, etc. I am not sure what the scrub is for staff to prep for OR is.

If such a specialized solution is required, could Hibiclens be an alternative?

I used to suffer from a severe contact dermatitis when latex gloves were the norm, years ago. So bad that they did NOT have time to clear up in between, my hands were in awful shape. A prescription steroid cream (triamcinolone) helped heal them up.

Specializes in -.

The hospitals in my area use Chlorhexidine as hand sanitizer (you just put it on like hand lotion and it dries if you get what I mean...). I get the same as you Jeremy, and went to my doctor as I didn't know what was causing it, and he told me just to avoid using it.

If you are just using it as a hand gel, maybe just wash your hands instead where possible, and ask your boss if you can take in your own product you can pop in your pocket as a replacement. Many brands (like Dettol for example) make their own pocket sized versions now.

My reply is the same as Banora. My old hospital had hand sanitizer with it and it made me break out in contact dermatitis. I went to the derm, that's what he suggested was the culprit, and it resolved a couple weeks after I stopped using it.

Good luck to you. It's certainly obnoxious to deal with!

cherrybreeze said:

If such a specialized solution is required, could Hibiclens be an alternative?

Hibiclens is chlorhexidine! I am allergic to this stuff as well. End up with ezcema on my hands. I have to avoid it. Some hospital handsoaps in the dispensers contain chlorhexidine now, I found it out the hard way... very painful hands!

I went and spoke with the infection control/employee health nurse regarding my issues and concerns. The solution was that they ordered some "special" soap for me that I could place at the sink at the nurse's station that didn't contain the chlorhexidine. If all else fails you could bring in a bottle of Dial and keep it in your locker to use during your shift. :uhoh3:

Specializes in Med/Surg.
twentytenRN said:
Hibiclens is chlorhexidine! I am allergic to this stuff as well. End up with ezcema on my hands. I have to avoid it. Some hospital handsoaps in the dispensers contain chlorhexidine now, I found it out the hard way... very painful hands!

I went and spoke with the infection control/employee health nurse regarding my issues and concerns. The solution was that they ordered some "special" soap for me that I could place at the sink at the nurse's station that didn't contain the chlorhexidine. If all else fails you could bring in a bottle of Dial and keep it in your locker to use during your shift. :uhoh3:

I apologize, I didn't know they were the same. Our hibiclens all comes in a solution that's bright red, our chlorhexidine swabs, etc, are all a clear solution. My bad.

+ Add a Comment