Yes. A yeast infection can cause itchiness, redness, and painful inflammation.
A vaginal yeast infection can interfere with the natural production of the body's own lubrication. Instead of the thin mucus the body normally produces, the discharge is a thicker, white fungal discharge which does not disperse as easily and therefore does not provide adequate lubrication throughout the vagina.
No. A yeast infection is caused by bacteria that grows inside your vagina. This bacteria likes moist places so if you sweat a lot or do not keep your vaginal area dry, you are more prone to yeast infections.
Unfortunately, it is not possible to make dry yeast at home as it requires specialized equipment and processes that are typically done in commercial settings. However, you can easily purchase dry yeast from a store for your baking needs.
it is dormant
Sounds like it could be. Go to the drugstore and get a cream for yeast infections and no sex for 7 days. You can give it to your partner.
One gram of active dry yeast is equivalent to 0.35 teaspoons of dry yeast in volume. Thus five grams of dry yeast is equal to 1.76 teaspoons of dry yeast.
There is no home remedy for yeast infection, there's only things you can avoid that can cause it; wearing tight thongs, using perfumed soap and having dry sex and things you can do to make your vagina healthy like drinking plain yogurt which helps cleanse the internal vaginal area.
To make nutritional yeast at home, you can mix inactive yeast with a food source like molasses or sugar, let it ferment, then dry and grind it into a powder.
Possibly the condom caused an irritation that by coincidence occurred at the time a yeast infection was brewing and caused the irritation common to yeast infection, but the condom, should not in itself cause the infection. Yeast infections are caused by an imbalance in the flora of your intestines or vagina. The over growth of the Candida a type of fungus is generally caused by taking antibiotics or the increase of estrogen common in pregnancy. Yeast causes a dry clumpy discharge that has no odor but is extremely irritating to the vaginal tissue. Using an anti fungal cream or suppository and using lactobacillus when you are taking antibiotics are both a big help in keeping the yeast under control. Also keeping the area clean and dry, wearing 100% cotton underwear, getting out of a wet bathing suit as soon as possible are all methods for controlling the recurrence. There are some chronic illnesses like diabetes that will make one more susceptible to yeast infection.
http://whatscookingamerica.net/Bread/yeastbreadtip.htm
A typical package of dry yeast contains about 2 1/4 teaspoons of yeast.
very dry skin,,,,ageing,,yeast infection,,bruises,,and causes hallucination
No. Yeast can only reproduce while it is a liquid. If it is dry, it will not.