The Side Effects of Doxycycline for Malaria
Doxycycline is used to prevent malaria. Malaria is a disease transmitted by mosquitoes to people. Malaria is easier to prevent than it is to cure. Aside from preventing malaria, Doxycycline is used as an adjunctive treatment along with other drugs to treat malaria. Doxycycline does carry some unpleasant side effects, but they may diminish with time as the person regains his health and is weaned off the medicine.
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Common
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Common side effects of Doxycycline are diarrhea, nausea, indigestion and heartburn, skin reaction to sunlight also known as photosensitivity, vomiting and loss of appetite.
Dangerous
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These symptoms, along with allergic and rare reactions, should be treated by a doctor immediately. The dangerous symptoms of Doxycycline are watery diarrhea, difficulty swallowing or dysphagia, severe throat pain, bloody stools, blurred vision, severe headaches, skin rash, joint pain, fever, tiredness and severe stomach cramps.
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Allergic Reaction
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Any allergic reactions should be treated immediately by a doctor. The signs of an allergic reaction are hives, itching, wheezing, skin rash, swelling in throat or mouth and difficulty breathing.
Rare
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Rare reactions to Doxycycline can occur and must be treated immediately. They are rare, but not totally implausible. The rare effects are changes in vision, liver damage, esophagus ulcers, irritation of the esophagus also called esophagitis, increased pressure in the skull also known as intracranial hypertension, tongue swelling or glossitis, worsening of systemic lupus, increased red blood cell destruction or hemolytic anemia, reduced of platelets in the blood or thrombocytopenia, serious intestinal infection or enterocolitis and vaginal yeast infection.
Conclusion
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Doxycycline is a handy medicine for preventing malaria. In the best-case scenario, one would receive the injection before malaria is contracted and he becomes ill. Doxycycline can still help treat malaria, even after the diagnosis.
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