Can Antibiotics Cause Bacterial Vaginosis?
Antibiotics can sometimes contribute to bacterial vaginosis by disrupting the natural balance of vaginal bacteria. Here’s how it happens, how BV differs from yeast infection, and what symptoms to watch for.
Understand medicines more clearly with simple, reader-friendly information on side effects, treatment questions, and how drugs may affect the body. This category helps readers make better sense of everyday medication concerns.
Antibiotics can sometimes contribute to bacterial vaginosis by disrupting the natural balance of vaginal bacteria. Here’s how it happens, how BV differs from yeast infection, and what symptoms to watch for.
Metronidazole can be followed by a yeast infection in some people, even though it does not treat yeast itself. Here’s why it happens, the symptoms to watch for, and how to tell yeast infection from BV after treatment.
Antihistamines can dry out mucous membranes in some people, and that may include vaginal tissue. This article explains the possible link, other causes of vaginal dryness, and when symptoms should be checked.
Some types of birth control may affect vaginal balance in ways that make yeast infections more likely in certain people. This article explains the possible connection, risk factors, and what to do if symptoms keep coming back.
Antibiotics can sometimes disrupt the normal vaginal balance and make a yeast infection more likely. This article explains why that happens, the symptoms to watch for, and how to reduce the risk.