Clotrimazole or terbenafine.
Antifungal cream will not cure bacterial vaginosis. See your health care provider for accurate diagnosis and effective treatment.
You scratch an itch! An itch itches. You scratch an itch to remove the pain.
find out your self
sure it had antiseptic activity
The scrotal region refers to the external pouch of skin that contains the testicles in males. This area is located between the legs and is responsible for protecting and supporting the testes. It is also a part of the male reproductive system.
Conventional treatment involves the use of an antifungal cream, spray or powder twice a day for about 2 weeks. Common medications include clotrimazole (Lotrimin) and tolnaftate (Tinactin).
tinactin or any kind of antifungal cream or medication will cure you. Curing a fungus requires an antifungal agent! hope this helps!
Most tinea infections resolve without scarring or spread of infection below the skin's surface. Inflammation, however, may require the use of a combination antifungal/steroid medication.
Abafungin is a form of antifungal treatment which can be used to treat dermatomycosis.
The treatment is very effective, it will require oral antifungal medication, but you will likely have to take it for a few months
Ring"worm" is actually a fungal infection, so creams containing clotrimazole or miconazole should be good; there are several over-the-counter antifungal creams for treatment of ringworm/athlete's foot/jock itch (which are all caused by essentially the same group of organisms). If those don't work, see a physician.
More common uses would be ringworm, athlete's foot, thrush, jock itch, and nail fungus.
You can use antifungal creams and gels, or you can take antifungal tablets. You just swallow those and they should surely fix your yeast infection in no time.
Sporasec contains Itraconazole an antifungal agent...often sporasec is prescribed for treatment of yeast infections
Sweet-age, or sweet-itch? Sweet itch is caused by parasites. You should talk to your vet about treatment, but I would shave the horses' mane to aid in treatment.
No. In spite of its name, ringworm is a fungus, not a worm/parasite. The treatment is antifungal medication, not antihelminthic medication.
Ring"worm" is actually a fungal infection, so creams containing clotrimazole or miconazole should be good; there are several over-the-counter antifungal creams for treatment of ringworm/athlete's foot/jock itch (which are all caused by essentially the same group of organisms). If those don't work, see a physician.