Tell your doctor or nurse immediately if you experience pain, burning, or redness at the injection site.
Tell your health care professional immediately if you experience pain, burning, or redness at the injection site.
Stop using oxiconazole and see your doctor if you experience unusual or severe blistering, itching, redness, peeling, dryness, or irritation of the skin.
Commonly, patients experience mild redness, scaly skin lesions and in some cases hair loss.
Brooks and colleagues say health care providers should ask their patients about whether they experience redness after drinking alcohol.
You may experience redness, itchiness, dryness, or darkening of the skin.
And, officials said, those who have used the product should call an eye doctor if they have experienced eye pain or redness, blurred vision, sensitivity to light, the feeling of something in the eye or excessive tearing.
The agency also advised people who have used the product to call an eye doctor if they have experienced eye pain or redness, blurred vision, sensitivity to light, the feeling of something in the eye or excessive tearing.
Patients undergoing cryosurgery usually experience minor-to-moderate localized pain and redness, which can be alleviated by oral administration of analgesics such as aspirin, ibuprofen or acetaminophen (paracetamol).
More sensitive patients may also experience redness, scaling, itching, and burning.