Rocephin is an injection used to treat gonorrhea. Chlamydia is not treated with injections.
There are various medications used to treat chlamydia. These were developed at various times. None was developed specifically to treat chlamydia.
Azithromycin powder in a 1g dose is sometimes used to treat chlamydia.
It is sometimes used to treat chlamydia. After taking it, get re-tested and confirm you are no longer infected.
Diclofenac (brand name Diclofelx) is an anti-inflammatory, not an antibiotic. It will not cure chlamydia nor any other infection.
Antibiotics are used to treat bacterial infections such as chlamydia, gonorrhea and syphilis. Antibiotics cannot treat viral infections such as HPV, herpes and HIV.
You won't reinfect yourself with chlamydia from the vaginal insert used to treat yeast. Chlamydia can live for only a short time outside the body, and washing and rinsing the insert is more than enough.
Yes. The typical medications used to treat UTI are not effective against chlamydia.
Diazepam and methocarbamol are also used by injection for relief of tetanus.
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Doxy is typically used for chlamydia at 100 mg twice daily for 7 days for asymptomatic infection. Duration may vary depending on the individual situation.
Amoxicillin is not a first choice for treatment of chlamydia. The first-line treatment is azithromycin 1 g for both pregnant and non-pregnant patients. Only pregnant patients unable to take azithromycin are prescribed amoxicillin.
Ofloxacin can cure chlamydia, but there are less expensive and easier treatments available. See your health care provider for effective diagnosis and treatment.