Antibiotics, of course, kill bacteria. Taking them would actually kill any infection in the urinary tract, not cause it, however, since urine flushes out toxins and waste from your body, you still could get inflammation in your urinary tract, therefore causing the same irritation as an UTI. You may also experience diarrhea as a result.
Urinary tract infections are very painful. Both females and males of all ages can suffer from urinary tract infections. Urinary tract infections left untreated can cause an upper tract infection that could be extremely dangerous and far more painful for any patient.
urinary tract infection
It is generally used for upper respiratory infections (bacterial), but can be used to treat a UTI (urinary tract infection).
Kidney infection, also called pyelonephritis and upper urinary tract infection, occurs when microbes, usually bacteria, invade the tissues of the kidney and multiply.
Pill imprint AMC has been identified as Amoxicillin. Amoxicillin is used in the treatment of urinary tract infection; upper respiratory tract infection; bacterial infection; bronchitis; kidney infections (and more), and belongs to the drug class beta-lactamase inhibitors. There is no proven risk in humans during pregnancy.
it is a kind of upper respiratory tract infection...ear infection, laryngitis, pharyngitis etc, are other upper respiratory tract infections
URI is the medical abbreviation meaning upper respiratory tract infection.
Upper Respiratory Infection
Upper Respiratory Infection
Azithromycin is primarily used for the upper respiratory areas. Supposedly it has no effect on a Urinary Tract Infection or Bladder Infection. Hope this helps! take care! I am a Certified Pharmacy Technician studying to become a Pharmacist.
A urinary tract infection (UTI) occurs anywhere in the urinary tract between the urethra (the outlet "pipe") and either or both of the kidneys. If it's confined to the urethra it's called urethritis. If it's in the bladder it's cystitis. If it travels up the ureter to the kidney it can develop into pyelonephritis, which is inflammation of the upper urinary tract. Acute pyelonephritis usually results from bladder infection (cystitis). It is usually treated with antibiotics and painkillers. Untreated and repeated UTIs may result in chronic pyelonephritis, which can eventually cause permanent kidney damage. A bad urinary tract infection left for over a year would undoubtedly cause some damage, if not to the kidneys then to the bladder. At the very least you would need to keep the urinary tract flushed out with copious amounts of non-caffeinated liquid.
No, it is not skin, but a membrane that is found lining all parts of the body that are internal but with an outside exit. These include your entire digestive tract, upper respiratory tract, and urinary/reproductive tracts. This membrane produces mucous and you make plenty of it when you have a upper respiratory infection like a cold.