Eczema leaves Mornington Peninsula mum in so much pain she’s unable to wear shoes: pustulosis

A mother of six suffering with a rare skin condition has shared her experience of living with the pain of eczema.

Nicole Preece, 34, is currently unable to wear most kinds of shoes due to the extreme blistering covering her feet and hands.

She is living with a rare form of eczema, palmoplantar pustulosis (PPP), which she was diagnosed with just minutes after the birth of her baby girl.

The condition causes huge blisters and burn-like appearances on parts of the body.

Nicole Preece (pictured), 34, said she looks like a ‘burns victim’ due to her painful skin condition

Around six years ago, Ms Preece saw her first flare up with eczema straight after giving birth to her daughter.

After two years of trying to deal with it, she went into remission for the skin condition before it came back in 2021.

Psoriasis covering her hands and feet hasn’t responded to regular treatments, with Ms Preece going to extreme lengths to try to calm the symptoms, including trying a pill intended for cancer patients that caused her hair to fall out.

With an Instagram following over 15,000, Ms Preece has taken to the platform to normalise and spread awareness about skin conditions, among other life experiences.

Ms Preece, from the Mornington Peninsula in Victoria, said she can’t wear anything but sneakers as the condition makes her shoes so uncomfortable.

‘I’d love to be able to wear thongs and play at the beach with my kids without pain,’ she said.

‘I look like a burns victim. I even have to wash my hair with gloves in the shower.

‘It sounds stupid, but it’s the little things that really tear me down.’

Nicole Preece (pictured) has shared her experience with psoriasis on Instagram, spreading awareness and normalising the condition

Nicole Preece (pictured) has shared her experience with psoriasis on Instagram, spreading awareness and normalising the condition

She said the 'little things' tear her down. Pictured is her hand with sores from her condition

She said the ‘little things’ tear her down. Pictured is her hand with sores from her condition

Ms Preece suffers from a rare form of eczema causing huge blisters on her hands and feet

Ms Preece suffers from a rare form of eczema causing huge blisters on her hands and feet

The current climate is playing its part in her flare ups too, with both warmer and cooler weather affecting her skin.

‘It’s a catch 22, because eczema gets better in warmer weather, but psoriasis gets worse,’ she said.

‘It’s very much down to how your body reacts.

‘The first flare, I tried over 60 different diets, treatments and natural ‘cures,’ which made it worse so they gave me a drug designed for cancer patients.’

After years of trying products, both over the counter and natural, Ms Preece hasn’t been able to cure her skin as such, but has found some relief in a natural product as well as some curious shower additions.

Nicole Preece hopes that in sharing her experience with psoriasis she will help to normalise the condition

Nicole Preece hopes that in sharing her experience with psoriasis she will help to normalise the condition

Mum of six Nicole Preece shows the sores on her hand caused by her rare skin condition

Mum of six Nicole Preece shows the sores on her hand caused by her rare skin condition

Using a specific eczema targeted lotion from MooGoo has helped soothe her outbreaks, but she is yet to find anything that will ‘cure’ it altogether.

She said she reached out to someone in the US suffering the same condition, who recommended she use oats in her shower routine to calm her blistering.

‘He said to get oats in a sock and pop it over the spout in the shower,’ she said.

‘They help to soothe the skin, and eating them helps too.’

She hopes to encourage her Instagram following to be more understanding of people, even though to others ‘it might just look like a little rash’.

‘Other people don’t see how it can slowly chip away at your mental health, which is a big thing.’

What is Palmoplantar pustulosis?

* Palmoplantar pustulosis is an autoimmune disorder that causes blister-like sores to show up on the palms of your hands and the soles of your feet. It can also cause cracked skin or reddened, scaly patches.

* There’s no cure for PPP, but it a dermatologist can treat it. Sometimes it comes back. But it could go away and never return.

* PPP first appears as tiny blisters with yellow pus. Eventually, these turn brown and become scaly.

* The blisters and sores can make it hard for you to walk comfortably or to use your hands without pain.

Source: WebMD 

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