Can Taking Fluconazole Cause A Yeast Infection If You Didn’t Have One
Can taking Fluconazole cause a yeast infection if you didn’t have one? Yes it can, and the bad news is, the infection has a high chance of being drug resistant. Fluconazole is a powerful oral anti fungal drug that should only be taken when you have been diagnosed by your doctor with a yeast infection.
Why Fluconazole causes a yeast infection
The Candida yeast that is the start of any yeast infection lives in your body naturally. You can’t do anything about that, but usually your body will prevent the yeast from mutating. Your body’s natural defenses keep the yeast under control.
If you use Fluconazole to kill fungus then the yeast will react to this drug by mutating. This is a self defense system that all yeast, fungi and bacteria have. Once the yeast mutates into a fungus you then have a yeast infection.
Fluconazole usually is the cure
Fluconazole will usually then be taken to kill the fungus once the Candia has mutated, but because it was the drug the caused the mutation, it will now just make the fungus mutate into a more aggressive strain.
Natural yeast cure
The most successful way to cure fungal overgrowth in the human body is naturally. Natural cures don’t cause any resistant fungus, and they strengthen your body’s natural defenses so the yeast can no longer mutate. You can read more about a natural cure here – Sarah Summer’s Natural Yeast Cure.