Is Your Candida Yeast Infection Really a Fungal Infection?
Many people don’t realize that a candida overgrowth is really a type of fungal infection. Many people are not aware that the fungus kingdom includes not only mushrooms, but also mildew, mold, and yeast.
What Is A Fungus?
A fungus is almost a “missing link” between the animal and plant kingdoms. Fungi (plural of fungus) used to be considered part of the plant kingdom, but actually, they’re more closely related to the animal kingdom. Biologists now assign fungal organisms to their own kingdom, the fungi kingdom.
Different Type Of Fungus
Some fungus grow only on dead things. Think of this type of fungus as mother nature’s clean-up squad. We’d be up to our necks in pretty gross stuff if it wasn’t for fungi!
Other fungi are parasitic, since they enjoy dining on things that are still alive. These parasitic fungus become pathogenic, or cause diseases when they take up residence on people, plants or animals. Parasitic fungi are the ones who cause all the trouble.
Fungi are not always bad. A mushroom is a fungus, yet mushrooms are found on the menus of many fine restaurants. Penicillin is obtained from molds and is widely used in medical treatments. Yeast is a fungus that helps bread rise, giving people around the world delicious breads and pastries.
Are All Fungal Infections Yeast Infections?
No. Yeast is only one type of fungus that’s present in our bodies all the time. Candida yeast normally lives in the digestive tract and doesn’t cause any problems. It’s job is to ferment food, which helps us to break food down into nutrients usable by the body.
Fungus infections can affect the ears, the feet, the skin, and the fingernails and toenail, as well as the vagina.
So A Yeast Infection Is Really A Fungal Infection?
Yes, it is. A candida overgrowth is a type of fungal infection.
A yeast infection is just a natural malfunction in a person’s body that must be corrected. A vaginal yeast infection, or candida infection, could be explained as a chemical breakdown in the vagina. Instead of performing protective functions, the yeast fungus grows too fast and multiplies above normal.
Antibiotics, pregnancy, poor diet, and even stress are common causes for yeast overgrowth.
Although all yeast infections are really fungal infections, not all fungal infections are yeast infections.
Are you troubled by recurring yeast infections? Yeast Infection No More is a clinically proven five-step system for treating candida at home. Get rid of your yeast infection once and for all!
[...] See the original post: Symptoms Of A bYeast Infection/b » Blog Archive » Is Your Candida b…/b [...]
December 26th, 2008 at 4:32 am