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Looking for a little hope was started.
I went to the doc the other day to see if I had any thing. When I went the doc said I had lot of white blood cells but she could not tell me what it is, so they are runing blood test. I fill like I dont have an STD could it be from Doucheing a lot?
hi. I just wanted to let you know that i have the same thing i think. i have had this for 2 years. My symptoms are a yellowish disharge, pasty, started out thick when i first got it, with a slight odor, that can be itchy and irritating at times. Right now i am taking a suppository with some kind of antibiotic and ant-yeast medication. I have been using it for a few days but i am not seeing any changes. I knows its not an STD because i was tested for all of them, even for strep, and even other forms of yeast that are not canidida. When i go to the doctors they get confused because i have many white blood cells which indicate an infection, but there is not bacteria or yeast other than whats supposed to be there. And this problem happened over night. PLEASE let me know how this goes for you, cause if it helps you, it might help me. What did your doc suggest that you have? please respond back, im desperate for some answers to this.
I went to the doctor in August with similar symptoms and they tested me for STD's, including chlamydia. This isn't an STD.
I did call my doctor yesterday and she said that the medication stays in my body for about 10 days so it may take that long to take care of what I have. If it's still bothering me I'm going to go see her again on Monday.
Thanks for the advice!
Hello,
Definitely go back and see your doctor. It does sound like you may have some type of vaginitis, but perhaps of a different etiology. Based on the treatment you describe it sounds like they were treating you for a chlamydia infection. Vaginal strep can only be diagnosed by vaginal culture and it is not an STD.
Nevertheless, they likely obtained swabs from your cervix to test for gonorrhea and chlamydia and they can tell you the results of that testing.
Best of luck,
Dr. Downing