Chlamydia doesn't cause a late period or change your menstrual cycle. If your period is late, take a pregnancy test.
Having a period will not affect chlamydia treatment.
Yes, when you are getting treated you can still transmit chlamydia. Patients being treated should avoid oral, anal, and vaginal intercourse (even with a condom) until seven days after single-dose treatment, or until seven-day treatment is complete.
In order to avoid reinfecion with chlamydia, a patient must avoid oral, anal, and vaginal sex (even with a condom), genital-genital contact, and sharing sex toys for seven days after one-dose treatment for chlamydia or for the seven days of week-long treatment for chlamydia. After treatment of all partners and the waiting period are complete, condoms can lower the risk of reinfection with chlamydia or infecdtion with another STD.
Yes, you can get chlamydia during your period.Yes, if he is infected with chlamydia.
If you had chlamydia for a long period, you may have experienced complications of chlamydia such as pelvic inflammatory disease or epididymitis. Most people with chlamydia do not experience long-term complications. Talk to your health care provider for advice specific to your situation.
You don't always get pregnant after having sex that first time and it doesn't happen when you want it. if you've had Chlamydia for a long period of time before you got the medicine the Chlamydia can also have made you sterile. Sadly, that is one of the side effects. And you two should not have unprotected sex while undergoing treatment.
No but pregnancy can. Be sure to get a pregnancy test to make sure that's not the cause of your late period.Women can still have periods if they have chlamydia. You can have chlamydia with or without getting your period.
As long as you don't transfer fluids from your finger to your eyes or genitals, you won't get chlamydia from fingering someone. However, you only need to abstain for seven days. For the sake of your health and that of your partner, find something else to do for this brief period of time.
There is no grace period. A bar/restaurant should have every glass empty well before closing time.
Chlamydia can clear up on its own. A metaanalysis undertaken by the CDC suggests that chlamydia may clear on its own within a year in some cases (see related link). It is bacterial, and the body can remove bacterial infections. Certainly, you should seek antibiotic treatment if you test positive. Even without symptoms, untreated chlamydia can cause damage.
Yes you can because of the blood. Practice safe sex and you will be fine, and if not get checked by a doctor first
Few women get discharge from chlamydia. The addition of menstrual fluid to the existing vaginal and cervical discharge will certainly change the appearance. If you're worried that you may have chlamydia, get tested.
There are no effects from the two occurring at once.