InfectionsMar 15, 2026
Nystatin powder has been fighting Candida infections for a long time, and the evidence says it's still pulling its weight. In one striking example, classic topical nystatin powder at 6,000,000 units per gram eradicated severe angioinvasive fungal infections in burn wounds across 4 patients, clearing both superficial and deep disease without impairing wound healing. That's a drug applied directly to some of the most vulnerable tissue imaginable, doing its job and getting out of the way.
The reason nystatin stays relevant is also the reason it frustrates researchers: it barely absorbs into anything. Your gut doesn't take it up. Your skin doesn't take it up. That makes systemic toxicity very low, but it also means the powder itself dissolves poorly in water, doesn't penetrate deeply, and needs frequent reapplication. Modern pharmaceutical science is trying to solve exactly that problem.
Antifungal TreatmentsMar 15, 2026
Most people prescribed nystatin for oral thrush get the suspension, that yellow liquid you swish around and swallow. But the research consistently shows that lozenges and pastilles outperform the suspension, and that how long you use nystatin matters just as much as which form you choose. If you have been swishing for a few days without results, the problem might not be the drug. It might be the delivery method.
Oral nystatin is a topical antifungal, meaning it works right where you put it rather than traveling through your bloodstream. It is not absorbed from the GI tract at all. That is both its biggest advantage (very few systemic side effects) and its limitation (it only works while it is in contact with the infection).
InfectionsMar 15, 2026
Most people think of yeast infections and UTIs as completely separate problems. One itches, the other burns, and you treat them differently. That part is mostly right. But there is a third scenario the internet rarely mentions: yeast can infect the urinary tract itself, producing symptoms that are clinically indistinguishable from a standard bacterial UTI. That means the burning, urgency, and pelvic pressure you assume need antibiotics might actually be caused by Candida, the same fungus behind vaginal yeast infections. And antibiotics will not help. They may even make it worse.
Understanding where these conditions overlap, and where they sharply diverge, changes how you should think about diagnosis and treatment.
InfectionsMar 14, 2026
Burning when you pee is the symptom that sends most people down the wrong path. Both urinary tract infections and yeast infections can cause it, which is why the two get confused constantly. But they affect different parts of your body, stem from different organisms, and require treatments that have zero overlap. Treating one when you actually have the other doesn't just waste time; it can make things worse.
To complicate matters further, there's a third possibility most people don't know about: Candida, the same fungus behind vaginal yeast infections, can also show up in the urinary tract. When it does, it mimics a bacterial UTI so closely that symptoms alone can't tell them apart.