Saturday, October 29, 2011

Medication For UTI

By Nigel Guzmdn


UTI, short for urinary tract infection, is a condition in the body that affects any area of the urinary tract. In relation to where in one's urinary tract the illness is situated, the kind of UTI is named appropriately. The areas which may be affected by a UTI include the bladder (where it is known as bladder infection or cystitis); kidneys (better known as kidney infection or pyelonephritis); ureters (which are almost never infected); and urethra (where a person gets urethritis).

Antibiotics are normally what is prescribed for an UTI. However the exact UTI medication that you will be provided with is also affected by the type of bacterium present in your urine and your general state of health.

For simple infections, the following are the usual medications prescribed: Levofloxacin or Levaquin; Ciprofloxacin or Cipro; Ampicillin; Nitrofurantoin, such as Macrodantin and Furadantin; Amoxicillin, like Moxatag and Larotid; and Sulfamethoxazole-trimethoprim, including Septra and Bactrim. Typically, the medications mentioned should clear up symptoms within just a few days of treatment, although you will have to keep taking your UTI medication for up to a week or more, depending on what you were instructed by your doctor to ensure that the infection has been completely addressed.

In instances wherein you have a urinary tract infection that is not complicated, occurring in a time wherein you are otherwise healthy, a shorter medication period may be prescribed to you instead, lasting just up to three days. Pain in your bladder may be present when you have a urinary tract infection so pain medications may also be part of what you will have to take in managing the condition. The analgesics used to treat UTI will oftentimes turn your urine orange or red, so don't let this alarm you.

A longer treatment or a set of short antibiotics may be necessary for frequent urinary tract infections. The doctor might also advise you to monitor your condition by doing at home urine tests.

An antibiotic may be prescribed for you after sexual intercourse if your infection is related to the sexual activities. For post-menopausal women, being prescribed the use of vaginal estrogen therapy may lessen occurrences of urinary infections. For conditions more severe than what UTI medication can handle, intravenous antibiotic treatment and hospitalization may be the only ways to address the condition.

An important factor in whether your condition improves, is the action you take to resolve it. For starters, make sure that you stick to the treatment program prescribed for you so that the infection in your urinary tract can be properly and thoroughly eliminated.

There is danger in stopping UTI medication midway because this gives the infection in your system to bounce back and come out even stronger than before. A stronger antibiotic will have to be prescribed if this happens, to kill off the stronger infection in your body. It will be good to do it in first instance in proper way, to avoid complication.




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