There are one or two risks that can happen, but the risks are extremely low.
No, chlamydia is a naturally-derived infection that is spread by sexual contact.
Chlamydia's classification is a bacterial infection, known as a sexually transmitted disease.
Chlamydial Infection, Chlamydia trachomatis, Chlamydia vaginitis. All I have heard of is these: clam ,and gooey stuff. Chlamydia is known as the silent disease.
Chlamydia. And any disease afflicting a deaf person.
Runny eyes and sneezing.
The concept of dominance applies only to genetic diseases. Chlamydia is an infectious disease, not a genetic disease. You can be a carrier of chlamydia; that is, you can be infected and capable of passing the infection without having symptoms.
Gonorrhea, chlamydia, and trichomoniasis can have very similar symptoms.
No, chlamydia is a naturally-derived infection that is spread by sexual contact.
Chlamydia can be a chronic or temporary disease. Ideally, a patient quickly learns about the infection and gets treatment; this treatment is completely curative and long-term infection will not occur. In addition, some patients will clear chlamydia without antibiotics, although nobody infected with chlamydia should avoid antibiotics. If chlamydia is left untreated, it can cause chronic complications, but these complications may persist after chlamydia is cleared with effective treatment. Lastly, it's possible to have untreated chlamydia for years without knowing. In that sense, chlamydia may be chronic.
Chlamydia doesn't cause liver disease per se, but can cause symptoms around the liver. Sometimes if a woman has chlamydia-related PID, she can get inflammation around the liver, called FitzHugh Curtis syndrome. This can be mistaken for gallbladder disease.
Mearly every animal carries chlamydia bacteria, but the Chlamyida trachomatis bacteria that causes a sexually transmitted disease only affects humans. Among the other types of chlamydia bacteria, cats, dogs, birds, pigs reptiles amphibians, and yes even humans, anything you could think of carries it.
Yes, it can be cured by a doctor.