Does Flucloxacillin treat ear infections?
About flucloxacillin Flucloxacillin is used in children, often to treat ear infections and chest infections. The medicine is available only on prescription.
Is Flucloxacillin a strong antibiotic?
Expert advise on the uses, dosage and side effects of flucloxacillin, an antibiotic to treat bacterial infections. Flucloxacillin is a penicillin-type antibiotic. It’s mainly used to treat skin infections, chest infections and bone infections. It’s also used for ear infections in children.
What happens if you take Flucloxacillin with food?
You should take flucloxacillin ‘on an empty stomach’, which means you should take it about an hour before a meal, or wait until two hours afterwards. This is because your body absorbs less flucloxacillin after a meal, which means the medicine is less effective. Space the doses out evenly during the day.
Can you take Flucloxacillin for 2 weeks?
Cholestatic jaundice and hepatitis may occur very rarely, up to two months after treatment with flucloxacillin has been stopped. Administration for more than 2 weeks and increasing age are risk factors.
How many days should I take Flucloxacillin?
It is usually given 4 times a day. Your doctor will advise you on how long to take flucloxacillin for (usually 5 to 7 days). Always take your flucloxacillin exactly as your doctor has told you. The pharmacy label on your medicine will tell you how much to take, how often to take it, and any special instructions.
Is Flucloxacillin a broad spectrum antibiotic?
They are mainly broad-spectrum antibiotics that can be used for a wide variety of infections, such as respiratory tract infections, skin infections and urinary tract infections. Flucloxacillin is reserved for treating bacteria that are resistant to other penicillins.
What antibiotic is stronger than Flucloxacillin?
For less serious skin and soft tissue infections, alternatives to flucloxacillin are required. Collections of pus require drainage which may obviate the need for antibiotics. If antibiotics are required, the two best candidates are cephalexin and erythromycin (or perhaps roxithromycin).
How do you know when your body is fighting an infection?
Signs of infection
- fever.
- feeling tired or fatigued.
- swollen lymph nodes in the neck, armpits, or groin.
- headache.
- nausea or vomiting.