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Penicillin is an antibiotic taken to prevent an infection, not cause it.
It is not the best antibiotic for uti
The most common medicine in uti is the antibiotic. and it can treat the uti soon. but it is easy to recur. and some people always use the herbal medicine to deal with this problem and it works well. Diuretic anti-inflammatory pills can be a better choice for the patient with uti. and it is worth a short.
I would say vancomycin
Generally not - because the antibiotic would be 'dismantling' the microbes causing the UTI (urinary tract infection). However, an antibiotic may cause vulvar irritation that may lead to symptoms of itiching and pain on urination - these symptoms may be mitigated by a specific cream. If the UTI is caused by a virus, then no antibiotic will solve the problem - the infection will in this case have to work its way out.
amoxyllin and pottassium clavulanate used as antibiotic for typhoid?
Urinary track infection e.g. a bladder infection. You should drink plenty of water to flush out bacteria and take all the prescribed antibiotic.
Cranberry juice can be helpful in treating mild UTIs. However, for antibiotic treatment, a prescription is required.
You should be alright to swim in a lake, the only concern is if you were to catch a different kind of infection from the lake water. The most common UTI is E coli. If you are on an antibiotic you should be alright though.
It could be antibiotic resistance, misdiagnosis (especially if you were treated without a culture), or anatomical differences that make you more likely to get them.
Most likely no. Penicillin is essentially the oldest antibiotic on the market. Invented for mass usage around the 1942. Which translates to a very high risk that most bacteria will already have developed antibiotic resistance to the antibiotic penicillin. Thus, taking the antibiotic will probably do no good and can actually prolong the pain and the infection. I recommend you either talk to your doctor or find an antibiotic that is more effective and stronger. Yet, even then you still run the risk of have a UTI that is antibiotic resistant to the stronger medicine. For instance, I developed a UTI and the doctor tested my urine and said I had a UTI. Then she prescribed my antibiotics and I was still in pain three days later. My mom, who is a microbiologist, figured the bacteria strain I had was resistant to this drug. So she decided to test me again to see what antibiotics the bacteria was resistant to and what antibiotics the strain of bacteria was susceptible to. After a long painful week with alot of the azi analgesic pills that dye your urine red or orange, I finally received the drugs I needed and the pain began to subside after three day on the strong antibiotics. Anyways