Contributing factors to yeast infections have been linked to taking antibiotics, contraceptives, immune system deficiencies, sexual activity, hyperglycemia and patients that don’t follow the first full course of treatment for the original yeast infection.
The cause of yeast infections are often promoted by the patient taking antibiotics for a different infection. This may be true for some women. However, the bulk of women that take antibiotics don’t acquire yeast infections on a normal course of antibiotics. Frequent antibiotic treatment does cause decrease vagina flora and allows growth of candida species the culprit of yeast infections. The risk of a yeast infection does increase with the length of time antibiotics are used. If you’re on a longer course of antibiotics the longer the duration the more your chance of developing one.
Using creams for contraceptive use increasing a woman’s predisposition to infection because they change the vaginal flora. Oral contraceptives usage also has an above average rate of yeast infections.
A deficiency in the immune system can make women inclined to develop yeast infections.
Physical factors such as sweating from tight fitting clothes or poorly ventilated underwear increases temperature or moisture in the vaginal area. Repeating this behavior can cause yeast infections.
Other suggested causes of yeast infections have been diet. Several studies don’t support this and changing diets or making the patient adhere to a strict diet didn’t change the recurrence of vagina yeast infection incidents.
Sexual transmission of yeast infections is controversial. Several physicians indicate strains of yeast infection found in both partners that were identical with incidence rates of forty-eight percent of the women with recurrent yeast infections. Treating male and female partners at the same time with oral antibiotics didn’t reduce the recurrence rate of the yeast infections. Therefore, it didn’t justify that sexual transmission contributed to the recurrence rate of the yeast infections. Almost half of the patients didn’t have a recurrent yeast infection after treating both partners
Some women don’t respond to the usual simple treatment for the average yeast infection, which is the medicine clotrimazole (Gyne-Lotrimin).
Clotrimazole can be purchased over the counter at most pharmacies, such as Walgreens. They may have a treatment resistant strand of yeast infection. Terazol is usually prescribed for treatment for resistant strands. After this initial treatment physicians usually do what’s called prophylactic treatment. This is treatment to prevent the recurrence of the infection. Oral antibiotics are taken for approximately two to four weeks depending on whether the treatment is an oral pill or creams administered intravaginally.
A healthy way of treating a yeast infection is eating yogurt. A prophylactic treatment if you’re on antibiotics for a different type of infection and usually develop a yeast infection, eat yogurt once a day while taking your prescription. Surprisingly there have been studies that prove this treatment is very effective for many women.
When being treated for yeast infections beware that some other medications interact badly with the yeast infection usual treatment. Interactions may cause detrimental effects. Prescription medications such as Coumadin, a blood thinner, Dilantin, heart medication, and Rufadin, another heart medication may interact with the medication for treatment of a yeast infection. Therefore, if you’re buying over the counter treatment ask a pharmacist or your physician if the treatment can interact with whatever prescription medications you’re currently taking
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