Usually when the doctor sends your urine for culture the bacteria is grown and tested against various antobiotics. Many bacteria are sensitive to penicillin but there are some bacteria that show resistance, ie penicillin won't work. Is sounds like your infection is resistant to penicillin. You need a urine culture sent so the bacteria can be identified and the right antibiotic for your specific bacteria type can be prescribed.
Good luck.
Thankyou, that explains a lot and is very helpful!!!
I'm doubled over in pain from my bladder. I've been sluffing and I've also been taking penicilin for a dental surgery I had. Would penicilin have worked on any infection or inflammation that I may have in the bladder? What antibiotics are specifically used for the bladder? Thank you.
Hi Hayley,
Sluffing of the bladder lining can certainly happen in patients with a bad urinary tract infection. The bacteria attach to and invade the bladder wall. Your body reacts to the infection by sending white blood cells to the site of infection to kill the bacteria. This reaction causing swelling and sluffing of the lining, pain and urgency, and often bleeding when the infection is bad. Once the bacterial infection is treated the white blood cell reaction resolves and the lining usually repairs itself.
Interstitial cystitis can be initiated by a an injury to the bladder. These injuries include an injury during a surgery like a hysterectomy, but the most common one is a bad bladder infection. Its common for patients to give a history of getting frequent bladder infections successfully treated with antibiotics for years. Then they get "the worst infection I ever had" and suddenly they have the symptoms of a bad infection but the urine cultures are negative, and they are ultimately diagnosed with IC. Inflammatory cells from the body's reaction to the infection in the bladder wall get out of control, causes pain and more inflammation to occur, perpetuating a vicious cycle. The bladder wall cannot repair itself and IC develops.