About Skin Yeast
Infections
Skin yeast infections can occur under the arms, along the
inner thigh, under the breasts, under excess fatty folds, in
the crease of the buttocks, under finger nails, under toe
nails, and in the webs of fingers and toes.
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The rash looks similar to a diaper rash on a baby. Soft
white patches in the mouth can also signal yeast
infections.
Humidity, tight clothing, poor hygiene, topical steroids,
and other skin diseases can contribute to skin yeast
infections. Using antifungal creams of the "azole" family of
medicines is the usual treatment for skin yeast infections. An
antifungal cream can be safely mixed with a hydrocortisone
cream to combat the itching. Washing and drying daily and using
powder to absorb moisture, plus wearing cotton clothing to
cover the areas more likely to obtain the yeast infection will
help recovery and lessen the chance for a return of
the infection.
The red, itchy, scaly rash will develop in warm, moist
areas.
Although there is no rule that intercourse should not be
allowed during treatment, it would usually be uncomfortable
depending on the location of the infection and is preferably
delayed so that the medication can achieve the full effects
without interference.
Yeast infections don't choose certain countries, certain
sexes, or certain ethnicities. People of all sexes, ages, race,
and from all over the world can contract a yeast infection. It
is not considered a sexually transmitted disease. However,
there have been instances where a person has passed it on to
another person through direct contact. There have also been
exceptions when men have developed topical itching and rash
following intercourse with an infected partner.
The yeast infection has an embarrassing effect on our skin
and is not a pretty sight, but certainly nothing one should be
ashamed of. It's no worse than having ringworm, another type of
skin fungal infection. You don't get the yeast infection just
by touching the area. If you have a cut and a low immune
system, you are more at risk for developing an infection of any
kind through direct contact. Because yeast must multiply to
cause an infection, it is not usual for a skin yeast infection
to be passed along to someone else. Someone else's yeast mixing
with your own yeast would not normally be a reason for
contracting the infection.
Yeast is generally nothing to be afraid of. It isn't a bad
fungus and only causes problems when it becomes out of control.
The yeast on the skin can be cleared up with the proper
medications, taking care to keep the skin clean and dry, and
getting to the root of the problem that caused the infection.
There may be dietary reasons that caused you to be allergic to
the yeast.
If you find that your skin yeast infections are coming back
frequently, you might try changing your diet to see if certain
foods are causing the problems. Keeping a food diary,
experimenting one type of food at a time and giving time for a
reaction to occur should pinpoint the problem if it is caused
by food allergy. The first foods to remove would be any foods
containing yeast products.
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