
If there is a problem like a slight downturn or cold-cold, we become a doctor ourselves and without any doctoral advice, we start taking antibiotics. Consumption of more antibiotics than needed and using these drugs on every small issue can be dangerous, especially for women. A recent study has found that women who take antibiotics for a long time increase the risk of heart attack or trauma. A study published in the European Heart Journal found that women 60 years of age or older who take antibiotics for two months or more, they are at the highest risk of heart disease. In the middle age (40-59 years), the risk of using antibiotic for prolonged use increases its risk.
Researchers have found no signs of increasing the risk of the use of antibiotic in adult women between 20-39 years old. The use of antibiotic is likely to be associated with the increased risk of heart disease because antibiotics change the balance of the microscopic environment in the intestine
Researchers believe that the use of antibiotic is the most important factor in changing the balance of microorganisms in the intestine. In previous studies, a link between the intestine changes in the microbiotic environment and the contraction of blood vessels and swelling, stroke and heart disease. The researchers studied 36,429 women participating in the Nurses Health Study. The study showed that during the time of adulthood, women who had been taking antibiotics regularly for more than two months, gradually related to heart problems




