A urine test for chlamydia won't make you bleed. A cervical swab may cause a small amount of spotting if your cervix is severely infected. One of the signs of chlamydia in females can be cervical bleeding with minimal contact.
Uterine bleeding after treatment for chlamydia is not likely to be related to chlamydia. See your health care provider for evaluation.
No. The treatment for Chlamydia is an antibiotic taken by mouth, most commonly Azithromycin or Doxycyline. Neither of these should make you bleed when taken correctly.
The causes and symptoms of uterine prolapse are best explained by a doctor or specialist in the field. After an examination and assessment, the doctor will be in a good position to offer advice and treatment if necessary.
YES YOU CAN! The bleeding is NOT YOUR PERIOD though, since a period is technically the shedding of the uterine lining and unfertilized egg. No one is really sure what causes the bleeding.
Chlamydia trachomatis is the scientific name for the bacteria that causes chlamydia.
There is no need to replace your toothbrush when you have chlamydia. The bacteria that causes chlamydia can only live outside your body for a few minutes. You can't get reinfected by using the same toothbrush after treatment.
CT is often used as the abbreviation for Chlamydia trachomatis, the bacteria that causes chlamydia.
A baby gets infected in the lungs with chlamydia trachomatis, the germ that causes the STD known as chlamydia, by being infected during vaginal birth. Adults do not get chlamydia trachomatis in their lungs. However, a different bacteria, Chlamydia pneumonia, is a common cause of bronchitis and pneumonia in children and adults. This infection is not sexually transmitted. A person infected with Chlamydia pneumonia has inflammation of the air passageways inside the lungs. Chlamydia pneumonia causes about 1 out of 10 cases of pneumonia in the US. The illness responds well to treatment with antibiotics.
The bleeding is caused by a "sloughing" of the uterine lining. Essentially, a uterus replaces its surface layer once every month. This occurs in a cycle. The final part of that cycle is the shedding or sloughing of the uppermost layer. This causes the bleeding. In case you feel this is gross or unusual, it might help to know that it occurs in most, if not all, female mammals.
Males can still produce sperm after getting chlamydia. If chlamydia causes scarring in the male reproductive tract, it's possible that sperm count will be decreased due to the blockage. In addition, men who get chlamydia infection in the testes may experience a decrease in sperm quality and quantity that gradually resolves after treatment. But sperm production continues.
It is not; they are separate causes. Chlamydia is bacterial, and yeast is fungal.
Chlamydia trachomatis, the bacterium that causes the STD known as chlamydia, does not affect any animal other than humans. Other types of chlamydia, such as Chlamydia psittaci, affect animals.
The erosion of the esophagus is what causes the bleeding when you purge.
Chlamydia doesn't cause bumps or a rash. Bumps or a rash can be caused by many other things, including STDs (herpes, warts, trichomoniasis), dermatitis, and infections that aren't sexually transmitted. Most women and many men with chlamydia have no symptoms, so if you think there's any chance that you're infected, you should see your health care provider for accurate diagnosis and treatment.