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Boric Acid Vaginal Suppositories
:

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Boric Acid Vaginal Suppositories

.

Vaginal suppositories/capsules (600mg standard), vaginal cream
$20–$60/course
Compounded in USA

How it works

Boric acid is a weak acid with antifungal and antibacterial properties. When inserted vaginally, it creates an acidic environment that inhibits the growth of Candida species (including azole-resistant strains like C. glabrata) and disrupts biofilms associated with bacterial vaginosis, restoring normal vaginal pH.

Why compounded?

The standard 600mg boric acid suppository lacks a widely available FDA-approved commercial form. Compounding pharmacies have provided this preparation for decades, allowing exact 600mg dosing per ACOG guidelines in easy-to-use gelatin capsule form.

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What is

Boric Acid Vaginal Suppositories

?

Boric acid vaginal suppositories are recommended by ACOG and CDC guidelines for recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis, particularly azole-resistant species. Clinical trials show 70–80% efficacy for C. glabrata infections that fail standard fluconazole treatment.

How

Boric Acid Vaginal Suppositories

Works

Primary Uses

Recurrent vaginal yeast infections (especially non-albicans Candida), bacterial vaginosis (BV) adjunctive treatment, vaginal pH restoration, recurrent BV prevention.

Other Applications

Dosing Information

⚠️ Note: Dosing should be determined by your prescriber. The information below is general guidance only.

Typical Adult Dosing

Acute yeast infection: 600mg vaginally once daily for 14 days. Suppressive therapy: 600mg vaginally twice weekly for 6 months. BV adjunct: 600mg vaginally once daily for 21 days after antibiotic course.

Mild vaginal irritation or watery discharge (common, usually temporary). Contraindicated during pregnancy. Toxic if taken orally—vaginal use only. Do not use with open wounds or lacerations.

Frequently Asked Questions

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Boric Acid Vaginal Suppositories

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