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A MUM has issued a warning to parents after her tot developed extreme burns on her face after brushing up against a flower.

Ella Cain was innocently playing in the back garden when she smelled and knocked a plant's stems featuring delicate yellow petals.

Ella had been playing in the garden when she came into contact with the dangerous flower
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Ella had been playing in the garden when she came into contact with the dangerous flowerCredit: Kennedy News and Media
Sap from the plant got onto the tot's skin, which made it sensitive to sunlight
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Sap from the plant got onto the tot's skin, which made it sensitive to sunlightCredit: Kennedy News and Media

The following morning, her mum, Audrey Cain, woke the two-year-old up and spotted tiny blisters bubbling up on her skin.

Thinking she'd fallen victim to poison ivy, the 27-year-old business owner dabbed the marks with chamomile lotion to relieve the itchiness.

But later that day, the blisters erupted into large, angry-looking burns all over little Ella's body, including her arms, legs, cheeks and nose.

After looking up the plant online, which had invaded the family's land, Audrey realised it was a wild parsnip plant.

Read more on burns

The plant can trigger a skin condition also known as phytophotodermatitis.

The root of the plant - a parsnip - is fine to eat, but the plant above the ground carries a toxic sap that stops the skin from protecting itself against the sun's rays, causing gruesome burns when exposed to natural light.

The panicked mum-of-four called doctors, who advised her to use hydrocortisone to soothe Ella's scorched skin and keep the tot out of sunlight.

After coming into contact with the plant, Ella was forced to wear long-sleeved clothing and play in the shade all summer.

Now fully healed, Audrey is sharing the three-year-old's experience to alert parents to the potentially toxic plant lurking in their gardens so they don't have the same experience.

The plant is common across England, particularly in the south and southeast, and Wales.

How to treat burns and scalds

Audrey, from Vassalboro, Maine, US, said: "It was heartbreaking seeing her in so much pain with these burns all over her.

"We have that plant all over our property. We just thought it was some kind of flowering plant; we never knew it was dangerous.

"She was in our backyard. She never picked them, she just smelled one, then she just touched the stems. We didn't think anything of it.

"Next thing you know, she's broken out in all these burns, and they progressively got worse over the next few days, including all down her face.

"She must have brushed up against one, too, because her leg broke out as well.

"I thought maybe she'd come into contact with poison ivy, but looked all over the yard and saw none.

"Then I looked up what the yellow plants were by our house and found out that it was wild parsnip, and it causes that."

Ella's mum Audrey initially thought her daughter had fallen victim to poison ivy
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Ella's mum Audrey initially thought her daughter had fallen victim to poison ivyCredit: Kennedy News and Media
Blisters erupted into large, angry-looking burns all over little Ella's body
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Blisters erupted into large, angry-looking burns all over little Ella's bodyCredit: Kennedy News and Media
The wild parsnip plant can cause severe burns on human skin
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The wild parsnip plant can cause severe burns on human skinCredit: Kennedy News and Media

The doctor advised Audrey to treat Ella's burns with hydrocortisone cream and keep her out of the sunlight to prevent angering the burns after the incident in July last year.

Audrey said: "Ella said it was itchy and it hurt, so we used chamomile lotion, then we switched to hydrocortisone. Then to heal it we used vitamin E oil.

"The burns lasted up to two weeks before they healed. That whole time she said how sore it was.

"The doctors said that for the remainder of the summer, she had to be careful not to go into the sun for too long and stay covered.

I was worried she would be scarred for life

Audrey CainElla's mum

"We kept her play area shaded and her skin covered as much as possible.

"We live on 113 acres of land, so it would be impossible to get rid of all of them, but we trim them down as much as we can and spray the area.

READ MORE SUN STORIES

"I was worried she would be scarred for life, but I think using vitamin E oil when she was in the healing stages really helped because she doesn't have any scarring.

"I'm sharing what happened  just so people are aware of it and know to stay away from it."

Ella. now fully healed, had to stay out of the sun for the rest of the summer
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Ella. now fully healed, had to stay out of the sun for the rest of the summerCredit: Kennedy News and Media
Audrey is sharing the three-year-old's experience to alert parents to the potentially toxic plant
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Audrey is sharing the three-year-old's experience to alert parents to the potentially toxic plantCredit: Kennedy News and Media

What is a parsnip plant burn? And how do you prevent it?

Wild parsnip brun is a skin condition also known as phytophotodermatitis.

  • Parsnip plant burns result when a chemical called furocoumarin reacts with sunlight
  • This chemical is found in limes and citrus fruits, celery, figs, fennel, and several other plants.
  • The burns typically start as a rash that forms within 24 hours of exposure.
  • People with a mild case of parnsip plant burn may never even notice it, as the condition tends to clear up on its own
  • Worse cases may develop into severe blistering that can land you in the hospital
  • Treatment varies depending on the severity
  • Make sure to wash your hands thoroughly after handling citrus fruits, avoid touching other people if you’re preparing food, and make sure to cover up if you’re drinking or eating al fresco during the summer months
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