Yes, you can use Monistat 7 after using clindamycin for bacterial vaginosis. However, since you've just been treated for BV, you should not self-treat what you're assuming is a yeast infection. Instead, contact your health care provider to make sure that you were screened for trichomoniasis when you were diagnosed with BV. Trich is harder to diagnose than BV , and a health care provider who doesn't look at the vaginal discharge immediately under the microscope or use a specific trichomonas swab can miss this condition.
If you're using clindamycin pills for BV, the dose is 300 mg twice daily for seven days.
There really are no "stages" of bacterial vaginosis. The first symptom is typically fishy vaginal odor, worse after using soap or after sex.
Metronizole gel cures bacterial vaginosis in 75-80% of cases. But after six weeks, 50% of patients treated for BV with any regimen have symptoms again. See your health care provider to make sure you were screened for trichomoniasis.
Yes it can and happens to a lot of women such as myself. I can go my entire life without getting the infection but once my husband ejaculates in me I find that days or works later I have the infection.
Birth control pills will not cause bacterial vaginosis, but some women may note a problem with BV after starting the pill if they've recently stopped using condoms. BV is not spread by sex, but exposure to semen can make BV more likely because it changes the vaginal pH. Try using condoms for a while if you're having this problem.
If you're using clindamycin pills for BV, the dose is 300 mg twice daily for seven days.
There really are no "stages" of bacterial vaginosis. The first symptom is typically fishy vaginal odor, worse after using soap or after sex.
can you take metronidazole and doxycycline while using monistat?
Metronizole gel cures bacterial vaginosis in 75-80% of cases. But after six weeks, 50% of patients treated for BV with any regimen have symptoms again. See your health care provider to make sure you were screened for trichomoniasis.
Yes it can and happens to a lot of women such as myself. I can go my entire life without getting the infection but once my husband ejaculates in me I find that days or works later I have the infection.
Birth control pills will not cause bacterial vaginosis, but some women may note a problem with BV after starting the pill if they've recently stopped using condoms. BV is not spread by sex, but exposure to semen can make BV more likely because it changes the vaginal pH. Try using condoms for a while if you're having this problem.
Bacteria vaginosis is not the same as chlamydia.Chlamydia is one of the most common sexually transmitted diseases in the U.S and the UK. This infection is easily spread because it often causes no symptoms and may be unknowingly passed to sexual partners. In fact, about 75% of infections in women and 50% in men are without symptoms.Chlamydia symptoms in womenAround 70-80% of women with chlamydia don't notice any symptoms. If women do get symptoms, the most common include:- pain when urinating (peeing)- a change in vaginal discharge- pain in the lower abdomen- pain and/or bleeding during sex- bleeding after sex- bleeding between periods- heavier periods than usualMost women do not experience symptoms of bacterial vaginosis, but when they do they are:Bacterial vaginosis signs and symptoms may include:Vaginal discharge that's thin and grayish whiteFoul-smelling "fishy" vaginal odor, especially after sexual intercourseVaginal itchingBurning during urinationLuckily if females infect with them, they could be cured by herbal medicine "fuyan pill".Hope this could help you.
Mirena does not cause bacterial vaginosis. Some women who stop using condoms when they start Mirena may have an increase in problems with BV. Using condoms may decrease the odds of recurrence. Changes in lifestyle can be helpful in reducing the risk of recurrence. These include avoiding perfumed vaginal products, using mild soap (not deodorant or antibacterial) in the vaginal area, avoiding douching, using condoms, wearing thong underwear only occasionally rather than daily, and making sure that if you have any anal sex play, you wash the finger, sex toy, or penis before it goes into your vagina.
Monistat should not cause a condom to fail, if that is what you are asking. Monistat is used to treat yeast infections. If you have a yeast infection you should not be having intercourse at this time because you can give your partner a yeast infection as well.
Birth Control pills will not cause bacterial vaginosis, but some women may note a problem with BV after starting the pill if they've recently stopped using condoms. BV is not spread by sex, but exposure to semen can make BV more likely because it changes the vaginal pH. Try using condoms for a while if you're having this problem.
Tubal ligation, also known as "getting your tubes tied," is a procedure to permanently prevent pregnancy by blocking the fallopian tubes. It does not directly cause bacterial vaginosis, which is an imbalance of the bacteria in the vagina. However, any surgical procedure can potentially disrupt the balance of bacteria in the vaginal area, increasing the risk of infections, including bacterial vaginosis.
Yes you can get pregnant; Monistat is not a spermicide. However, you should NOT have sex with a yeast infection-- you can pass it to the guy, who can then pass it back to you. Guys can be yeast carriers without symptoms.