There are no native remedies to cure brucellosis; there is no science in native remedies.
For brucellosis patients without spondylitis, neurobrucellosis or localized lesions due to endocarditis, the treatment is as follows:
1. For non-pregnant adults, a combination of doxycycline + aminoglycosides (streptomycin or gentamicin) is recommended over oral combination therapy. The incidence of treatment failure and relapse is lower when aminoglycoside-containing regimens are used; if avoiding parenteral therapy is preferred, oral combination therapy may be chosen. The duration of treatment is 6 weeks.
2. Oral administration is more convenient than parenteral treatment, so oral combination therapy is recommended for children: doxycycline + rifampicin for those ≥8 years of age; cotrimoxazole (TMP-SMX) + rifampicin for those <8 years of age. The course of treatment is 6 weeks.
3. If the pregnancy is <36 weeks, treatment with rifampicin + cotrimoxazole is recommended compared to other regimens. The use of cotrimoxazole in the last month of pregnancy may lead to neonatal kernicterus, so rifampicin monotherapy is given until delivery if the pregnancy is ≥36 weeks. After delivery, the combination therapy continues to be given as for nonpregnant adults for a total course of 6 weeks.
If patients are infected with brucellosis, they should go to the hospital promptly and should not utilize local remedies to avoid delaying the disease.