Erythromycin is not a first-choice medication for chlamydia due to side effects and the need to take the medication so frequently. The correct dose is 500 mg of erythromycin base four times daily for seven days, or EES 800 mg four times daily for seven days for non-pregnant patients with chlamydia. You would be much better off with another treatment. See your health care provider for effective diagnosis and treament.
Doxycycline cures chlamydia. The typical dose is 100 mg twice daily for seven days.
Chlamydia trachomatis improves rapidly with erythromycin. Chlamydia psittaci infection is treated with tetracycline, bed rest, oxygen supplementation, and codeine-containing cough preparations. Chlamydia pneumoniae infection is treated with erythromycin
Chlamydia and trichomoniasis must be treated with different medications. There is no medication that cures both, as the germs are so different from each other.
Yes, a person contract chlamydia in two days.
Azithromycin powder in a 1g dose is sometimes used to treat chlamydia.
1 gm of zithromax is required to treat chlamydia, taken in 1 dose. A Zithromax Tri-Pak contains three pills of 500 mg each. Take two of these in one dose to cure chlamydia.
In the US, typically azithromycin or doxycycline, same as for women.
A baby with chlamydial conjunctivitis or pneumonia due to Chlamydia trachomatis is treated with erythromycin. Because the effectiveness of treatment is only about 80%, retesting and possible retreatment should be done.A baby born with chlamydia can be cured easily, but some are not diagnosed for years after contracting the illness.
Both medications are listed by the CDC for treatment of chlamydia. Doxycycline used to be cheaper, and azithromycin easier to take, but since the 2013 doxycycline shortage started, azithromycin is both cheaper and easier.
If you took an adequate dose of ciprofloxacin to cure chlamydia, the chlamydia test should be negative as long as you didn't get tested too soon after treatment.
There hasn't been a problem with drug resistance with chlamydia, but the biggest change was the introduction of azithromycin, which is a one-day treatment that's easier to complete than the previous seven-day doxycycline or erythromycin treatment.
No, there is no need for an injection of any kind to cure chlamydia. It can be cured with a single dose of antibiotics in pill form.