Posts Tagged diet

curing candida

Saturday, August 28th, 2010

curing candida
This systemic candida cures medicine that is the cause of skin allergies?

I have read that allergies are caused by Candida on the wall gut. What medicine is effective in killing Candida (fungus)? If you try a drug that has been effective for you please let me know. Thank you in advance:)

Systemic treatments are used for esophageal candidiasis and disseminated. They also be used for other infections that occur frequently or do not disappear with a topical treatment. Ketoconazole (Nizoral) is taken at 200 or 400 mg times a day. It needs acid to be absorbed, so it should be taken with food. Antacids should be avoided. It should also not to be taken in conjunction with other therapies that may contain a buffer or antacids such as ddI (didanosine, Videx). It can be well absorbed in people with bowel problems or who can not eat much. When I leave, an acidic drink like a cola can help. Fluconazole (Diflucan) is taken at 200 mg on the first day, then 100 mg once daily thereafter. Treatment usually lasts two weeks for oral candidiasis or skin for three weeks esophageal infection (or two weeks after symptoms clear up, whichever is longer). The dose may be increased to 400 mg daily dose lower does not work. Studies suggest that fluconazole is more effective than ketoconazole. Some doctors still prefer to treat fungal infections aggressive with other drugs such as ketoconazole, fluconazole order to save power for later use, if necessary. Resistance to fluconazole is well documented. Once it develops, then treatment options are very limited. Itraconazole (Sporanox) appears to be at least as powerful as ketoconazole and can be as good as fluconazole. It is stomach acid to be absorbed, so it should be taken with food. The dose 200 mg per day. If not enough drug is absorbed, blood levels may be necessary to verify whether the dose can be increased. itraconazole oral solution is more efficient and puts increased levels of drug in the blood capsule. There is great potential for interactions between itraconazole and many anti-HIV drugs. For more information, read Project Inform's publication, Drug Interactions. Fungizone (amphotericin B) is given directly into a vein. It is used to treat disseminated candidiasis when other systemic therapies or not the infection is very aggressive. It is sometimes used with another drug, flucytosine, specific to treat fungal infections like cryptococcal infection. This used to be the standard treatment for systemic fungal infections or severe. It lasted 8-12 weeks and often gave severe side effects such as kidney damage and anemia. People are now generally given amphotericin B until they begin to improve (usually two weeks). They then switched to fluconazole 200-400 mg daily. Other forms of amphotericin B are used when systemic infections become resistant or less responsive to standard therapy. These include amphotericin B colloidal dispersion (ABCD, Amphotec) and amphotericin B lipid complex (ABLC, Abelcet). They may have fewer side effects than amphotericin B standard, but all can be very toxic.