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Acute Candida infection is an overgrowth of yeast that causes symptoms ranging from oral thrush to invasive bloodstream infections. It is caused by Candida albicans, a fungus that normally lives on the skin and in the body but can multiply rapidly when the immune system is weakened or the body's natural balance is disrupted. The Candida albicans Antibody Panel (IgG, IgA, IgM) is the most important blood test for diagnosis because elevated IgM antibodies indicate a current or recent acute infection.
Acute Candida infection is caused by an overgrowth of Candida albicans, a type of yeast that naturally lives in the body. This overgrowth occurs when the immune system is weakened by conditions like HIV, diabetes, or chemotherapy, or when antibiotics kill the beneficial bacteria that normally keep Candida in check. Other triggers include hormonal changes during pregnancy, high-sugar diets, prolonged moisture in skin folds, and the use of corticosteroids or birth control pills that alter the body's microbial balance.
The Candida albicans Antibody Panel (IgG, IgA, IgM) is the most important blood test for acute Candida infection because it measures your immune system's response to the fungus. Elevated IgM antibodies are particularly significant as they are the first antibodies your body produces during an active infection, indicating a current or recent acute Candida infection. The test also measures IgG antibodies, which suggest past exposure or chronic infection, and IgA antibodies, which are associated with mucosal infections like oral thrush or vaginal yeast infections. This comprehensive panel provides your healthcare provider with a complete picture of your infection status when other diagnostic methods may be inconclusive.
You should get tested if you have persistent symptoms like white patches in your mouth, thick vaginal discharge with itching, unexplained fatigue, recurring digestive issues, or skin rashes that won't heal despite treatment. Testing is especially important if you have a weakened immune system, have recently taken antibiotics, or experience symptoms that keep coming back after initial treatment. People with diabetes, those undergoing chemotherapy, or anyone with chronic infections should consider antibody testing to identify whether Candida albicans is the underlying cause of their persistent health issues.
What this means
Your testosterone levels are slightly below the optimal range. While this is not necessarily cause for concern, it may contribute to occasional fatigue, reduced motivation, or lower muscle mass over time.
Recommended actions
Increase resistance or strength training
Prioritize 7–8 hours of quality sleep per night, try to reduce stress
Include more zinc- and magnesium-rich foods (like shellfish, beef, pumpkin seeds, spinach)
Consider retesting in 3–6 months
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