1Your UTIs Are Arriving Faster Than They Used To
Your early UTIs came every six to nine months. Annoying. Manageable.
Then the gap closes. Every three months. Every two. Every six weeks. You finish a course of Macrobid on a Tuesday and you are back in your doctor's office five Mondays later.
What you are watching is not bad luck. It is the speed at which a missing layer of protection collapses.
Inside a healthy vagina, a colony of Lactobacillus crispatus produces lactic acid, keeps pH low, and acts as the wall that stops E. coli from your gut from climbing the urethra. After menopause, estrogen drops. The glycogen that feeds the crispatus colony drops with it. The colony starves. The wall comes down.
The acceleration is the warning sign.
"If your UTIs used to be once a year and are now every six weeks, that is not your anatomy giving out. That is your vaginal microbiome collapsing in real time." Dr. Rebecca Hartwell, OB-GYN and Velara formulator