i have a discharge that is whitish.. it have a fowl smell and i don't know what it is i went to the doctor over and over they give me treatment 4 yeast but none works .....................i need your help and...... %-) :-( ..........some what smell that even me can sense it :$ .please help me
am awaiting a responds
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There are a couple of aspects that you don't cover that could be relevant.
Firstly, for what it's worth, if the medical staff are competent, then we might at least assume that yeast is indeed an issue. Be aware that typically it is also pretty tenacious. It's not like take an advil and it goes away. All it takes is one yeast cell to start a colony and an issue.
Which leads to the second point: you don't refer to an internal hygiene regime. There's a limit to how fast any organism can grow, and your body is teeming with bacteria, of which the (presumed) yeast is only one example. You are a warehouse of e-coli, they're in your butt and intestine, and as long as they stay there, that's cool. Get into your stomach or vagina, and they flourish in a way that is disinctly nasty.
We are food for bacteria, and growth and smells are a natural part of that - and to limit their extent, it comes down to personal hygiene - internal hygiene of the vagina, as well as external obviously. You may want to look that up on Google, or ask on that point specifically, as for obvious reason that is not a habit I am overly familiar with. Basically an internal wash (douche, french for shower) is called for, and the content and regularity is something you will need to investigate.
It's no point inserting tablets, or taking pills, if you do not assist the process with appropriate hygiene, according to their recommendations.
Finally, though less likely given the obviousness apparently of the smell, there are women who produce a whitish discharge or lubrication instead of the more normal clear lubrication, and while every vagina (and penis, and woman, and man) will smell, and may indeed smell bad to you, that doesn't mean it smells bad to everyone - provided that it is natural.
If it is, as doctors suggest, a yeast infection, then yes, they are difficult to eliminate. Appropriate hygiene however should make it a mild nuisance however, rather than a crushing disappointment, or life-changing (or threatening) event. It is not an STD, in the sense that it does not threaten you, or your partner.
Don't let it interfere with your life beyond taking reasonable steps to limit it, and if it is your natural discharge, not yeast, then attempting to limit it will in any case be futile, and counter-productive.
Firstly, for what it's worth, if the medical staff are competent, then we might at least assume that yeast is indeed an issue. Be aware that typically it is also pretty tenacious. It's not like take an advil and it goes away. All it takes is one yeast cell to start a colony and an issue.
Which leads to the second point: you don't refer to an internal hygiene regime. There's a limit to how fast any organism can grow, and your body is teeming with bacteria, of which the (presumed) yeast is only one example. You are a warehouse of e-coli, they're in your butt and intestine, and as long as they stay there, that's cool. Get into your stomach or vagina, and they flourish in a way that is disinctly nasty.
We are food for bacteria, and growth and smells are a natural part of that - and to limit their extent, it comes down to personal hygiene - internal hygiene of the vagina, as well as external obviously. You may want to look that up on Google, or ask on that point specifically, as for obvious reason that is not a habit I am overly familiar with. Basically an internal wash (douche, french for shower) is called for, and the content and regularity is something you will need to investigate.
It's no point inserting tablets, or taking pills, if you do not assist the process with appropriate hygiene, according to their recommendations.
Finally, though less likely given the obviousness apparently of the smell, there are women who produce a whitish discharge or lubrication instead of the more normal clear lubrication, and while every vagina (and penis, and woman, and man) will smell, and may indeed smell bad to you, that doesn't mean it smells bad to everyone - provided that it is natural.
If it is, as doctors suggest, a yeast infection, then yes, they are difficult to eliminate. Appropriate hygiene however should make it a mild nuisance however, rather than a crushing disappointment, or life-changing (or threatening) event. It is not an STD, in the sense that it does not threaten you, or your partner.
Don't let it interfere with your life beyond taking reasonable steps to limit it, and if it is your natural discharge, not yeast, then attempting to limit it will in any case be futile, and counter-productive.
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