A 45-year-old member asked:
just stopped antibiotic. how long until completely out of system?
1 doctor answer • 3 doctors weighed in

Dr. Hunter Handsfieldanswered
Infectious Disease 53 years experience
It depends...: ...on which antibiotic. A day or two for most, up to 2 weeks for long acting ones like azithromycin (Z-pak).
2.8k viewsReviewed >2 years ago
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Similar questions
A 21-year-old member asked:
If an anthrax event occurs, should people buy and store antibiotics?
2 doctor answers • 6 doctors weighed in

Dr. PHILLIP KIManswered
General Practice 15 years experience
Social issue : This becomes a social issue as storing antibiotics may interfere with those really in need for them. The shelf life of the drug becomes an issue as effectiveness of the drug can decline over time.
6.1k viewsReviewed >2 years ago
A 21-year-old member asked:
Should an elevated strep. Titer be treated with antibiotics?
2 doctor answers • 3 doctors weighed in

Dr. Mark Diamondanswered
Pediatrics 46 years experience
No: This means your child had a previous strep infection and had an immune respone which is a good thing. The elevation does tell us when the infection was active.So rely on what symptoms your child has and ask advice of your doctor. If your child is sick and has a positive throat culture , yes antibiotics
are needed.
6.3k viewsReviewed >2 years ago
A 21-year-old member asked:
Why don't doctors prescribe antibiotics as much as they used to?
3 doctor answers • 11 doctors weighed in

Dr. PHILLIP KIManswered
General Practice 15 years experience
Resistance: Potential for resistance, most cases don't require it, and/or side effects when you don't need it.
6.1k viewsReviewed >2 years ago
A 21-year-old member asked:
Why do antibiotics not work well against pseudomonas aeruginosa?
2 doctor answers • 6 doctors weighed in

Dr. Booth Wainscoatanswered
Infectious Disease 21 years experience
Various reasons: Pseudomonas is a very common bacteria which has developed many clever ways of resisting different antibiotics. It can destroy the antibiotics with chemicals, pump the antibiotics out of its cell or become 'invisible' to antibiotics by changing the appearance of the bacteria. Pseudomonas can adapt to antibiotics & change during the course of treatment. Serious infections often require an expert.
6.1k viewsReviewed >2 years ago
A 21-year-old member asked:
Are antibiotics the safest ways to treat ecthyma gangrenosum?
2 doctor answers • 3 doctors weighed in

Dr. Martin Raffanswered
Infectious Disease 56 years experience
Yes: This is overwhelmingly a bacterial infection which should respond to antibiotics if aided by the host's immune system. If you have no white blood cells, however, response may be quite limited.
6.1k viewsReviewed >2 years ago
90,000 U.S. doctors in 147 specialties are here to answer your questions or offer you advice, prescriptions, and more. Get help now:
Last updated May 24, 2015
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