ARTICLES
Yeast Infections
When a woman develops a white discharge and vaginal
itching, her doctor often diagnoses yeast infection, even though
he may be wrong because every healthy woman has yeast in her vagina
and cultures of the vagina almost always grow yeast, even in women
who have no symptoms at all. A doctor diagnoses yeast by inserting
a cotton swab into the vagina, placing it in a drop of water and
examining the fluid for yeast under a microscope. Cultures should
not be used to diagnose yeast as most healthy women harbor yeast
in their vaginas, mouths and intestines.
Yeast infections often follow taking antibiotics or birth control
pills, but when yeast cause a rash on the genitals, it often is
acquired through sexual contact or it can be caused by immune defects
associated with diabetes or HIV. When normal healthy people develop
rashes caused by yeast, doctors should look for a cause. Genital
infections caused by yeast are often associated with a special
type of yeast that is able to break though the skin to cause a
red, itchy rash. Men and women with genital rashes caused by yeast
either have an immune defect such as diabetes or they have a special
yeast that can be acquired through sexual contact.
Women who have documented yeast infections and a rash from it
can be cured when they and their partners take ketoconazole, 400mg
daily for 14 days, or fluconazole, 150 mg/day for 4 days. Women
who keep on getting documented yeast infections may need to take
itraconazole 50 to 100mg daily or fluconazole 100mg weekly or 150mg
monthly. Short courses of topical therapy, such as clotrimazole
or miconazole may also be used.
Since yeast is a normal inhabitant in the vagina, it is often
diagnosed as the cause of vaginal itching when it is only an innocent
bystander. When a physician takes cultures for many different types
of infections and finds only a yeast, she usually prescribes suppositories
(over-the-counter clotrimazole vaginal suppository, once a day
for three days) to kill yeast and the patient feels better for
a week or so because the suppository lubricates the irritated area.
Then the itching returns because these women often are infected
with mycoplasma, which is extraordinarily difficult to find on
culture, and can be cured when they and their partners take azithromycin
(250 mg once a day for 9 days) to kill the mycoplasma. If a woman
really has a vaginal yeast infection, she usually clears up with
a pill called fluconazole (150 mg/day for 4 days).
A study from the University of Leeds shows that women who get
yeast infections over and over, have the same type of yeast that
recurs; it is not a new infection. This means that women with recurrent
yeast infections and their partners should be treated for several
weeks with oral drugs to kill yeast such a Diflucan, and not just
with vaginal suppositories
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