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Antibiotics and Medical Implications
This is written from our own experience of lessons learned
the hard way.
Most people, when they suffer their first few episodes
of cystitis, go for a medical cure - in other words, antibiotics. Initially,
the antibiotics can be very effective, especially if you have never had
cystitis before. However, with every additional infection, that particular
antibiotic is likely to become less effective, as the bacteria builds
up resistance.
Every time you have another episode of cystitis, therefore,
it tends to be worse than the time before, and then you have a real dilemma.
Doctors who are naturally and correctly wary of prescribing antibiotics
are unlikely to want to give you a more powerful dose, which means that
some of the infection is likely to survive, effectively allowing the E.coli
to develop resistance, until standard antibiotics like Trimethoprim will
no longer work. Meanwhile, your episodes of cystitis last longer and longer,
and they are likely to begin causing kidney damage, and a lot of persistent
pain.
At this point, (in the absence of Waterfall D-Mannose
), you will need more powerful broad-spectrum antibiotics to try to solve
the problem. And at first these will work. However, the wily E.coli continues
its process of resistance until stronger and stronger broad-spectrum antibiotics
are required to kill the infections, and these cause their own particular
problems.
Note: To be fair to doctors, if they wait to get laboratory
results before prescribing, your infection could be much worse by then,
but proper investigation of serious UTI's involves testing cultures of
the bacteria found in the urine against a variety of antibiotics, both
in isolation and combination, to find the most effective narrow spectrum
antibiotic or combination. However, this test is much more costly and
takes longer than simply prescribing broad spectrum antibiotics, and so
the tests are rarely performed. In most cases, urine tests for UTI infection
simply involve identifying the infection, and the doctor will prescribe
an antibiotic that is known to be effective against that particular bacterium,
in a non-resistant form. This, however, takes no account of bacterial
resistance.
Mohamed H. Dahir - Chairman Pharmaceutical Association
of Somaliland, The Dangers of Indomethacin:
"If a bacterium is responsible, it is extremely
important for the doctor to know which specific bug is causing the trouble
so that he can treat it with the right drug. Using a broad-spectrum
antibiotic is a cop-out. It is the lazy way to do medicine, since it
allows the doctor to cut out the time necessary to do a proper laboratory
work-up and diagnosis."
Others will (perhaps) test for the
presence of E.coli, and then prescribe antibiotics without taking previous
infections into account. They'll treat each infection as a new infection,
instead of as a reinfection, or as a recurrence of the same infection,
despite the fact that antibiotics leave 21% of women with vaginal E.coli
still present after 6 weeks (see below). So they'll give you the same
dosage as last time, and if it's the same bug you were fighting before,
that's been living quietly in your urinary tract just waiting for your
immune system to go down a bit to allow it to start multiplying again,
or for you to have sex and shake some E.coli loose from their protected
place underneath their bio shield on your bladder wall, it will take
that antibiotic longer to kill the infection, helping the bug to build
up resistance.
Read the Drug
Watch study for more information. What becomes clear is that rather
than testing your particular infection to determine the most appropriate
treatment, patients are treated statistically. You are statistically more
likely to respond to trimethoprim-sulphamethoxazole, so that is the first
antibiotic that most doctors choose - it is also, conveniently, the cheapest
antibiotic, and hence the cheapest way for a doctor to attend to your
infection. And most of the time they can order the cheapest tests - just
testing for the presence of an infection.
Note also that (in the absence of Waterfall D-Mannose ):
"Trimethoprim-sulphamethoxazole
proved to be the best treatment, with 82% of women cured at the six-week
visit, and with the lowest remaining incidence of vaginal E coli (21%).
Adverse events were reported by 35% of patients treated with trimethoprim-sulphamethoxazole,
similar to other treatments. " Drug
Watch
Note the huge
number of women (35%) with adverse effects, and compare this to over
90% of infections cleared by Waterfall D-Mannose, and 0% of patients
suffering adverse effects. The presence of E.coli after using Waterfall
D-Mannose is not known, but what is known is that if you take Waterfall
D-Mannose, even after being treated for cystitis with strong antibiotics
over an extended period, a huge amount of E.coli is flushed out of your
urinary tract. This strongly suggests that many fewer women will be
left with E.coli after taking Waterfall D-Mannose, than after taking
antibiotics. And we know from a huge amount of user feedback that Waterfall
D-Mannose prevents recurrence of the problem in most cases. The longer
you've been taking it - the less often threats of cystitis occur, so
it does seem to make the bladder very healthy over time.
How likely are you to get side effects?
Here's an extract from a clinical trial outlined on RXList:
"In this trial, the overall incidence rates of
adverse events regardless of relationship to study drug and within 6
weeks of treatment initiation were 41% (138/335) in
the ciprofloxacin group versus 31% (109/349) in the
comparator group. The most frequent events were gastrointestinal: 15%
(50/335) of ciprofloxacin patients compared to 9% (31/349) of comparator
patients. Serious adverse events were seen in 7.5% (25/335) of ciprofloxacin-treated
patients compared to 5.7% (20/349) of control patients. Discontinuation
of drug due to an adverse event was observed in 3% (10/335) of ciprofloxacin-treated
patients versus 1.4% (5/349) of comparator patients. Other adverse events
that occurred in at least 1% of ciprofloxacin patients were diarrhea
4.8%, vomiting 4.8%, abdominal pain 3.3%, accidental injury 3.0%, rhinitis
3.0%, dyspepsia 2.7%, nausea 2.7%, fever 2.1%, asthma 1.8% and rash
1.8%."
Not all of the observed side effects are listed.
Antibiotic side-effects
The stronger the antibiotic you take, as a general rule, the worse the side
effects. The side effects of broad-spectrum antibiotics, and in particular
Fluoroquinolone based antibiotics such as Ciprofloxacin can include, but
are not limited to the following:
| Cardiovascular |
Heart attack, heart murmur, palpitations, angina, cerebral thrombosis,
sudden death on first dose. |
| Nervous System |
Convulsive seizures, psychosis, depression, hallucinations, paranoia,
insomnia, nightmares, dizziness. |
| Gastrointestinal |
Liver failure, jaundice, gastrointestinal bleeding, diarrhoea, ulcerative
colitis, burst intestine, vomiting, constipation. |
| Muscles and Bones |
Tendon seizure, tendon bursting and ripping, jaw, arm or back pain,
joint stiffness, neck and chest pain, aching all over, gout. |
| Kidneys and Urinary Tract |
Kidney failure, calcification in kidneys, urethral bleeding, severe
thrush, vaginitis. |
| Lungs |
Respiratory arrest, blood clotting in lungs, shortness of breath,
pulmonary edema (lung collapse), hiccough. |
| Skin/Hypersensitivity: |
Anaphylactic shock, skin sloughing (falling off), dermatitis, skin
death, vasculitis, angioedema, swelling of the lips, eyes, or face,
fever, chills, going purple. |
| Sensory disturbances: |
Blurred vision, eye pain, disturbed vision, hearing loss, dizziness,
tinnitus, involuntary eye movements, damaged sense of taste. |
Immune system effects
When you take antibiotics, your immune system can become
weakened, meaning that you are more prone to infection than before you
took the antibiotics. So the infection may be killed, but you get reinfected
easily. When this is combined with reinfection with a more resistant strain
of the bacteria that caused the original
infection, it can be very difficult to deal with.
Broad spectrum antibiotics are more likely to damage
your immune system, so as time goes on, and you become infected with more
and more resistant strains of (usually) E.coli, you find it not only harder
to fight off each infection, but harder to prevent yourself becoming reinfected.
Eventually, no matter what you do, even if you are clean to the point
of obsession, like almost everyone who has suffered repeated episodes
of cystitis, you still get infected. This is often because the bacteria
have been living in your gut or urinary tract, just waiting for your
immune system to be at its lowest, allowing it to breed rapidly and take
over your body once again.
Wipe from front to back? No wonder you want to say to
the doctor, "Listen pal, you could safely eat your dinner off my
bottom! My infection has nothing to do with my personal hygiene."
Thrush - Candida Albicans
The stronger the antibiotic, as a rule, the worse the
episode of thrush you get afterwards. Eventually, the thrush can become
as persistent and almost as painful as the cystitis, because the fungus
builds up resistance to the treatments you use against it. See coping
with thrush
Symptoms of Vasculitis
Vasculitis of varying levels of severity is one of the
listed side effects of some broad spectrum antibiotics commonly used for
the treatment of cystitis. It is caused by immune reaction that can disrupt
DNA and RNA, and put white blood cells on the attack against your own
body. Lupus-like effects are common.
Symptoms can include, but are not limited to:
| Skin |
Red or purple dots, usually most numerous on the legs. When the
spots are larger, about the size of the end of a finger, they are
called "purpura." Some look like large bruises. These
are the most common vasculitis skin lesions, but hives, itchy lumpy
rash, and painful or tender lumps can occur. Areas of dead skin
can appear as ulcers, small black spots appear at the ends of the
fingers or around the fingernails and toes, or you may get gangrene
of fingers or toes. |
| Joints |
Aching in joints and obvious arthritis with pain, swelling and
heat in joins. Deformities resulting from this arthritis are rare.
|
Brain |
Vasculitis in the brain can cause many problems, from mild to
severe . They include headaches, behavioural disturbances, confusion,
seizures, and strokes. May be fatal. |
| Peripheral Nerves |
Peripheral nerve symptoms may include numbness and tingling (usually
in an arm or a leg, or in areas which would be covered by gloves
or socks), loss of sensation or loss of strength, particularly in
the feet or hands. |
Intestines |
Vasculitis can cause inadequate blood flow in the intestines,
resulting in crampy abdominal pain and bloating. If areas in the
wall of the intestine develop gangrene, blood will appear in the
stool. If the intestinal wall develops a perforation, surgery may
be required. |
| Heart |
Vasculitis may affect the coronary arteries. If it occurs, it
can cause a feeling of heaviness in the chest during exertion (angina),
which is relieved by rest. Heart attacks rarely occur as a direct
result of vasculitis. |
Lungs |
Vasculitis in lung tissue can cause pneumonia-like attacks with
chest x-ray changes that look like pneumonia, and symptoms of fever
and cough. Occasionally, inflammation can lead to scarring of lung
tissue with chronic shortness of breath. |
| Eyes |
Vasculitis can involve the small blood vessels of the retina.
Sometimes, vasculitis of the eyes causes no symptoms. Usually, however,
there is visual blurring which comes on suddenly and stays, or a
person may even lose a portion of their vision. In temporal arteritis,
there is sudden loss of part or all of the vision in one eye, usually
accompanied by severe headache. |
Research
Lucas MJ, Cunningham FG: Urinary tract infections complicating
pregnancy. In: William's Obstetrics. 19th ed. 1994: 1-15.
H.M.I. Osborn, J.J. Gridley, "Recent advances in the construction
of beta-D-mannose and beta-D-mannosamine linkages", J. Chem. Soc.,
Perkin Trans. 1, 2000, 1471-1491.
Schieve LA, Handler A, Hershow R: Urinary tract infection during pregnancy:
its association with maternal morbidity and perinatal outcome. Am J Public
Health 1994 Mar; 84(3): 405-10.
Sweet RL, Gibbs RS: Urinary tract infection. In: Infectious Disease of
the Female Genital Tract. 3rd ed. 1995: 429-64.
CDC Special Report : "Emerging Mechanisms of Fluoroquinolone Resistance"
David C. Hooper Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School,
Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Fuchs S, Simon Z, Brezis M: "Fatal hepatic failure associated with
ciprofloxacin" Lancet 242:738-739 (1994).
InsightsandOutcomes.com - Article 194 : Health Researchers, Physicians
Express Concern About Rising Antibiotic Resistance.
Read
more at RX List.com
Read
more at Healthsquare.com
Read
more at Tips of All Sorts
Read
More at Better Health
Read
More (Vasculitis Article 000874) at Medline Plus
Related Websites
D-Mannose UK
Sweet Cures
Cystitis
Antibiotics
Bladder Infection
Association
Bladder Health
Organisation
Pain When
Urinating
Cystitis Pain
Harnwegs Infektion
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