Many attentive mothers may sometimes find their babies' ears quite cold while taking care of them. And even if a baby is given more clothes and well insulated, their ears will still feel cold and sometimes accompanied by tremors. So, what's wrong with a baby's cold ears?
Generally speaking, if a baby frequently experiences coldness in their hands, feet, face, and ears, it may be due to excessive sweating leading to excessive heat dissipation, slow peripheral nerve blood circulation, or weak constitution.
Therefore, parents may notice that their baby's ears are prone to getting too cold. So it is important to pay attention to wiping the baby's sweat in a timely manner after they sweat, in order to avoid excessive heat dissipation and rapid decrease in skin temperature. When the weather is cold, it is also important to keep your baby warm to avoid catching a cold due to lack of warmth.
However, generally speaking, a baby's ears are located in the peripheral nerve area, where blood circulation is slower, and the ears are the cooler part of the human body. So it's normal for the ears to occasionally feel cold, but parents still need to pay attention to the baby's physical condition, give the baby more water to drink, and avoid the baby catching a cold.