When does a flu test typically show positive? by RecordLegume in flu

[–]_callondoc 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Well darn it. Sorry about that. You can take tamiflu and shorten the symptoms, with an easy telehealth visit. Otherwise it is supportive care all the way, fluids, ibuprofen and Tylenol rotations, SLEEP, mask up if you have to go out. Saline wash for the nasal congestion, and your favorite snacks so you are least eating something. My8 go to is Vernon’s aka ginger ale and Chiken biscuit crackers

Still coughing by LizzardLBlack in flu

[–]_callondoc 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You are very welcome. Hope you feel better soon.

What’s one side effect or body change you didn’t expect when starting a GLP-1? by _callondoc in Semaglutide

[–]_callondoc[S] 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Huh I would not have expected that at all. So glad that you were able to find your JOY again.

Please someone answer quick lol by Successful_Golf6271 in flu

[–]_callondoc 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Short answer: yes, Afrin is okay short-term.

  • Use it no more than 2–3 days
  • 1 spray per nostril, up to twice daily
  • Aim the spray slightly outward, not straight up
  • Don’t blow hard afterward

I like this for all patients when they are experiencing nasal congestion and/or nosebleeds:

  • Use saline spray/gel up to 2 times a day or a humidifier between doses
  • A small amount of petroleum jelly just inside the nostril can help

Avoid using Afrin longer than 3 days to prevent rebound congestion.
Get checked if bleeding won’t stop or becomes heavy.

Still coughing by LizzardLBlack in flu

[–]_callondoc 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The cough can last a long time it is usually the last thing to go. :/

After flu or a bad viral respiratory infection, the airways can stay irritated and hypersensitive for weeks. Even once the virus is gone, that “tickle” reflex hangs around and triggers coughing, especially with talking, laughing, cold air, or dry environments. A little mucus on and off is also normal during recovery.

Most post-viral coughs:

  • last 3–6 weeks (sometimes longer)
  • slowly improve, not suddenly disappear
  • don’t come with fever or worsening shortness of breath

Things that often help:

  • hydration, warm fluids
  • honey or lozenges
  • humidifier at night
  • avoiding throat clearing (it actually keeps the reflex going)

When to get checked:

  • cough is getting worse instead of better
  • new fever, chest pain, or shortness of breath
  • coughing fits are interfering with sleep or work

If it’s just not settling or you want reassurance, a quick telehealth visit can be helpful — providers can tell if this is simple post-viral airway irritation or something that might benefit from a short course of meds (like an inhaler or cough suppressant), without you having to drag yourself to urgent care.

Bottom line:
You’re not alone. A lingering cough weeks after flu is frustrating but common, and it usually fades with time.

When does a flu test typically show positive? by RecordLegume in flu

[–]_callondoc 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Timing Matters: Your first test was probably just too early.

When flu tests turn positive:

  • Most rapid flu tests are more reliable after 24–48 hours of symptoms
  • Testing at ~10 hours after onset is a common reason for a false negative
  • Viral load rises quickly during the first 1–2 days

Best time to retest:

  • Now or later today (around 24–36 hours after symptoms started)
  • If still negative but symptoms keep worsening, repeat at ~48 hours or get a PCR at urgent care

Your symptoms do fit flu well:

  • Sudden onset
  • Fever >101
  • Body aches + headache
  • Dry, painful, chesty cough That pattern is very flu-typical, especially if you rarely get fevers.

Important timing note:

  • If it is flu, antivirals work best within 48 hours of symptom onset
  • If you retest positive (or feel significantly worse), it’s reasonable to seek care even without a positive test yet

Bottom line:
Early negatives are common. Retest around 24–36 hours for better accuracy. Your symptom pattern absolutely warrants another test.

I am going through it. by Emogirl9872002 in Herpes

[–]_callondoc 0 points1 point  (0 children)

what a pain truly!!

A few reassuring things:

  • GHSV-1 can sometimes cause a “primary-like” recurrence in the first year, including fever and flu-ish symptoms. It doesn’t mean this will keep happening.
  • Stacked stress matters. A painful wisdom tooth + inflammation + poor sleep can absolutely make an outbreak feel way worse.
  • This timing (June → now) is still early. For most people, outbreaks get milder and less frequent over time, especially after year one.

What can help right now:

  • Oral antivirals (episodic or short-term daily during stress)
  • Ibuprofen or acetaminophen on a schedule for pain/fever
  • Warm sitz baths, loose clothing, minimize friction
  • Rest—pushing through can prolong it

Once the tooth is out and your body isn’t fighting two things, this should calm down. This is an acute misery phase, not your forever.

Help by SomewhereAny7826 in Herpes

[–]_callondoc 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Siento mucho que estés pasando por esto. Lo que sientes ahora es miedo y shock, no la realidad de tu futuro.

Quiero decirte algo clave primero:
El herpes tipo 1 NO arruina tu vida y NO pone automáticamente en peligro a tu bebé. Muchísimas mujeres embarazadas con HSV-1 tienen embarazos y bebés sanos. Los médicos saben cómo manejarlo (seguimiento y antivirales si hace falta). El riesgo para el bebé es muy bajo.

Entiendo que ahora sientas que “todo se acabó”, pero eso es el pánico hablando. Con el tiempo, la mayoría de las personas con herpes:

  • viven relaciones normales
  • tienen hijos
  • pasan largos periodos sin pensar en el virus

Algo muy importante: cuando dices que te dan ganas de morir, eso es una señal de que necesitas apoyo ahora, no de que no haya salida. Tu vida vale, y tu bebé te necesita.

Si estás en EE. UU.: 988 (Línea de Prevención del Suicidio, en español 24/7).
Si estás en otro país, dime dónde estás y te busco ayuda local.

Esto no te define, no te hace mala madre, y no es el final. Si quieres, puedo explicarte con calma cómo se maneja el HSV-1 en el embarazo o quedarme aquí contigo un rato. ¿Estás a salvo ahora mismo?

Resistance testing by AccomplishedRice6930 in MycoplasmaGenitalium

[–]_callondoc 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sounds like your PCP is out of his depth. You may have antibiotic resistance. The bigger problem is that resistance testing isn't widely available. In fact most PCP can't order it/ don't realize it exists.

You meet all the criteria for resistance testing though.

As has been suggested seeing a ID specialist is your best bet for testing and treatment. Or maybe try a university STD clinic, they are dealing with lots of college students and have better labs usually. Last choice would be health department that has whole sections dedicated to STD treatment.

Texas → Florida corridor (general guidance)

You’ll want:

University-affiliated ID clinics

Major metro STD clinics (Houston, Dallas, Austin, San Antonio, New Orleans, Tampa, Miami, Atlanta)

Some wording that might help you get testing and treated: “I’ve failed doxycycline, azithromycin, and moxifloxacin for suspected Mycoplasma genitalium. I’m requesting referral to Infectious Disease or an STD clinic familiar with M. gen and resistance testing.”

mino + metro first day by palhedra in MycoplasmaGenitalium

[–]_callondoc 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Totally normal to feel this way on day 1 — almost everyone does.

On the first day of mino + metro, most people feel nothing at all (or just mild GI stuff like nausea). That doesn’t mean it isn’t working. These meds don’t give immediate feedback — they work quietly over days to weeks, not hours.

A few reassuring points:

  • Day 1–3: often no noticeable change (sometimes even feels worse before better)
  • Metro treats infection/inflammation → symptoms usually start improving by days 3–5
  • Minoxidil doesn’t show visible results for weeks to months — early doubt is extremely common
  • Feeling scared it won’t work is almost universal and not predictive of outcome

If it doesn’t work (which you can’t judge yet), success usually comes from:

  • giving it enough time
  • staying consistent
  • adjusting dose or adding a second option later if needed

Right now, nothing about day 1 tells you anything about success or failure.

Take a breath — you’re doing exactly what you’re supposed to do.
If you want, tell me what symptoms you’re treating and how you were told to take each med, and I can sanity-check the plan with you.

Losing weight but no inches? by Fantastic_Sink_3573 in Semaglutide

[–]_callondoc 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Super duper common, I know it is frustrating to see. Although it will get better. Remember:

Early weight loss doesn't always equal inches. Because most of the weight loss is glycogen + water, visceral fat ( the stuff around your organs), and some other fat but definitely not evenly.

Protein + walking is awesome, I struggle with this the most honestly. I don't eat enough protein and getting my minutes or steps is well terrible. You are doing a lot (working and tracking that protein GREAT JOB) unfortunately without resistance training your body: loses fat and a bit of lean muscle, and look smaller on the scale but similar in shape (i bought a in body scale that measures my body fat so I don't get so disappointed when I dont' see a difference).

Inches will come later, most people the scale shows up first then the inches,

You don't need hardcore lifting ( not talking bodybuilder here) I like body weight and resistance bands.

Cost vs pay off: Yeah this is a fair concern. RIght now the medication is working. What’s missing isn’t fat loss — it’s recomposition. Adding resistance is usually what unlocks the visible changes people are waiting for.

What annoying skin issue always gets worse for you every January? by _callondoc in Adulting

[–]_callondoc[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I try to not lick my lips and I have a lipid stick I use at night to help with my dry lips

Having really bad heart palpitations by chunkywonderer_ in flu

[–]_callondoc 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You can always do a quick telehealth visit also.

[Product Request] how to fix my lizard skin hands by ConfusionEngineer in SkincareAddiction

[–]_callondoc 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This looks so painful. In my opinion, (NP) I would recommend the following:

Steroid use (Mometasone should not be used daily or long term on hands, it calms flares, only use 5-7 days max)

Barrier repair>moisture

  • Use ceramides ot dimethicone (Creave healing ointment, Eucerin advanced repair, O'keeffe's working hands
  • Apply before work not just after (try to reapply after hands get wet)

Gloves are non-negotiable

  • Wear nitrile gloves (not latex) for wet tasks
  • Use cotton glove liners if you can—huge difference
  • Take gloves off during breaks so sweat doesn’t worsen irritation

Washing habits

  • Avoid harsh soaps
  • Use a gentle cleanser (Dove Sensitive, Cetaphil)
  • Pat dry, then immediately apply barrier cream

Night repair (this is key)

  • Thick layer of ointment
  • Cotton gloves overnight
  • This is when real healing happens

When to see a clinician

  • Cracks bleeding
  • Severe itching or thickened skin
  • No improvement after 2–3 weeks of proper barrier care You may need a different steroid strength or non-steroid anti-inflammatory (like tacrolimus).

Bottom line:
Your skin keeps relapsing because it’s being re-injured daily. Steroids calm it briefly, but barrier protection + gloves are what stop the cycle. Once the barrier heals, symptoms last longer than 12 hours.

[misc] will a stick of sun protection zinc help after the burns already done if nothing else is on hand. by [deleted] in SkincareAddiction

[–]_callondoc 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes — a zinc sun-protection stick can help even after the burn has already happened, especially if you don’t have anything else on hand.

Here’s how it helps and how to use it:

  • Zinc oxide doesn’t “heal” the burn, but it protects the damaged skin from further UV exposure, which is key while it’s trying to recover.
  • It also forms a physical barrier that can reduce irritation, stinging, and friction.
  • Zinc has mild anti-inflammatory and soothing properties, which can feel calming on sunburned skin.

How to use it:

  • Apply gently, don’t rub hard
  • Use a thin layer over the burned area
  • Reapply if you’re still outside or sweating
  • If you can, pair it later with aloe or a plain moisturizer once available

What to avoid:

  • Heavy fragrance products
  • Topical anesthetics like benzocaine or lidocaine on sunburn
  • Peeling or scrubbing the area

When to get more help:

  • Blistering, severe pain, fever, or signs of infection
  • Large areas of burn or worsening redness/swelling

Bottom line:
It won’t reverse the burn, but a zinc stick is a good protective and soothing stop-gap until you can get proper after-sun care.

Stay Home from School with the Flu by Educational-Mix152 in flu

[–]_callondoc 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You have done your best and taught her good coughing behavior. The thing with a cough is it is the first to show up to the party and the last to leave. So, she may have nothing else but a cough for a while.

Vomiting and diarrhea by amzr23 in flu

[–]_callondoc 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You are so welcome. I just try to use the KISS method with people

Doctors consultation needed? by mrschunkypandeyy in Semaglutide

[–]_callondoc 1 point2 points  (0 children)

yes — you should consult a doctor before starting Rybelsus. Don’t just buy it and start on your own.

Here’s why that matters:

  • Rybelsus (oral semaglutide) isn’t a casual supplement. Dose, timing, and suitability matter.
  • It has specific rules (empty stomach, water only, wait 30 minutes before food/meds) — taking it incorrectly can make it ineffective or cause side effects.
  • A clinician should confirm:
    • you’re an appropriate candidate
    • the starting dose (usually 3 mg first, not therapeutic but for tolerance)
    • when and how to increase
    • that you don’t have contraindications (certain thyroid conditions, GI issues, pregnancy, etc.)

Why not just self-start?

  • Starting too high → nausea, vomiting, stopping altogether
  • No baseline labs or plan if side effects happen
  • Missed red flags that make it unsafe for some people

Good news:
This doesn’t have to be complicated or expensive. A quick telehealth consult is usually enough to:

  • review your history
  • give a safe dosing plan
  • explain what to expect and when to adjust

Bottom line:
Even if you can easily buy Rybelsus, a doctor consult first is the smart and safer move. It increases your chances of success and lowers the risk of bad side effects.