ty situation but i couldn't help but laugh![]()
Some antiobiotic pills I took 2 years ago changed my whole digestive system.
Tried taking probiotics, eating yogurt, banana, etc.... finally got my system almost back in track, but it isn't what it used to be. I have to take showers everytime I take a .. but that's not a problem because I in the morning usually, so it works out.
Anyone else have it?
ty situation but i couldn't help but laugh![]()
What AB did that to you (and what were you taking it for), Flagyl?
doxycycline and Clindamycin for an infected cyst.
wtf? How bad was the infection, cause Doxycycline is typically used for malaria patients iirc
It's effective for skin infections too. The cyst was also on a very bad spot on my neck and somewhat risky business to remove, so I had to take 2 antibiotics to make it go away completely.
must have absolutely killed your flora, go spend more time with your parents they are who you get it from.
Fecal transplant.
http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/20...linical-trial/A little more than a year ago, I wrote a piece in Scientific American about fecal transplants — replacing the stool in someone’s colon with stool donated by someone else — as a treatment for the pernicious, recurrent diarrhea caused by Clostridium difficile infection.
I have been a journalist for two decades, and some of my stories have won prizes, triggered hearings and legislation, and caused people to change their minds about significant social issues — but I don’t think anything I have written has ever proved as sticky with an audience as that 1,500-word column. In the 60 or so weeks since it was published, I have heard from more than 100 people — yes, that’s more than 1 per week — who are afflicted with C. diff, believe that a transplant could help them, but cannot find a doctor who agrees that the procedure has merit.
A paper published Wednesday evening in the New England Journal of Medicine may give those patients assistance, and change those doctors’ minds. It represents the first report from a completed randomized trial of fecal transplants, and it finds that the treatment worked much better than the powerful antibiotics that are usually given for C. diff infection — so much better, in fact, that the trial was ended early, because the monitoring board supervising the trial’s execution could not ethically justify withholding the transplants from more patients.
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