Painful urination should go away within a week of gonorrhea antibiotics. If you still have painful urination after a week, contact your health care provider for advice. Antibiotic resistance is an increasing problem in gonorrhea, so you must make this call.
Yes, painful urination due to chlamydia may come and go. If you believe you may be at risk for chlamydia, get tested. Most patients do not have symptoms.
See a doctor. It could be serious.
Yes, you can get chlamydia during your period.Yes, if he is infected with chlamydia.
Chlamydia can go undetected for years. Chances of getting chlamydia from someone who's infected are about 40-60% for each episode of vaginal sex.
You likely have an infection. As said, go see a doctor. Now.
There can be several factors. In a male, an enlarged prostate can cause difficulty in urination. For both men and women, kidney stones or a kidney infection can make urination difficult or painful. Sever dehydration (which can be a result of failure to drink enough fluids, overheating or illness) can also contribute. See your doctor immediately.
Chlamydia scarring does not go away after antibiotic treatment, although the germ is gone and won't do further damage.
Be sure to check in with your doctor if it persists more than a day or so. No telling what it is from here.
There are some home tests available, and there are services that allow you to go directly to a lab for chlamydia testing for a significant fee. There is no test for chlamydia that you can do with common household items.
The Painful Art of Letting Go was created in 2008.
Simply take the antibiotic (zithromax) to cure chlamydia. It likely will have no affect on your life at all. Go to your local health department if needed.
Chlamydia does not remain "dormant." A person can have chlamydia for years without having symptoms, but the infection is active during that time, and can be transmitted and can cause damage, even if the patient doesn't notice any pain, discharge, or unusual symptoms.
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.