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What is Clotrimazole?

Clotrimazole is an antifungal agent used for the treatment of susceptible yeast infections, including oropharyngeal candidiasis, superficial mycoses, and cutaneous candidiasis, as well as vulvovaginal candidiasis.

Reported Purpose & Efficacy

Reasons and Efficacy
Purpose # of patients
# of patients with evaluations Efficacy
Major
Moderate
Slight
None
Can’t tell
Oral thrush (candidiasis) 6 0
Vaginal Yeast Infection 2 0
Prevent infection 1 0
Rash/Breast/Vaginal 1 0
Treat side effects of another treatment 1 0
Yeast Infection (candida) 1 0

See all 17 patients currently taking Clotrimazole

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Reported Dosages

  10mg as needed 1 mcg monthly 1 other daily 20 mg daily 40 mg daily 50 mg daily
  4 Number of Patients: 4 1 Number of Patients: 1 1 Number of Patients: 1 3 Number of Patients: 3 6 Number of Patients: 6 2 Number of Patients: 2  

Reported Stop Reasons

Why Patients Stopped Taking Clotrimazole (multiple reasons could be selected)
Reason # Patients Percentage of patients
Doctor's advice 2   Doctor's advice: 50%
Course of treatment ended 2   Course of treatment ended: 50%
Personal research 1   Personal research: 25%

See all 3 patients who’ve stopped taking Clotrimazole

Currently Taking Clotrimazole

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0-1 month 1-3 months 3-6 months 6 months-1year 1-2 years 2 years or more
0
0
0
0

Stopped Taking Clotrimazole

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0-1 month 1-3 months 3-6 months 6 months-1year 1-2 years 2 years or more
0
0
0
0

See more information, including instructions, precautions, side effects, and interactions.

Report created on May 28, 2012.