You get chlamydia from having unsafe sex with someone who already has it - regardless of what your line of work is.
Blotting? As In Bleeding, then yeah It doesYou can bleed from being infected by chlamydia.
No it can not.
Yes, there is no harm in using a pad or tampon during treatment for chlamydia.
Yes, you can catch chlamydia from someone even if you're taking antibiotics when you have sex with that person.
Children can catch Chlamydia trachomatis (the one that causes a sexually transmitted infection). The most common mode of infection is being born to a woman with chlamydia. It's possible for the child to remain undiagnosed for years after infection. In addition, children can get infected from sexual abuse. There are other types of chlamydia, such as Chlamydia pneumonia, that more commonly infect children.
You can't get chlamydia from being too clean. You get chlamydia from sexual contact with someone who has it. It's spread by oral, anal, and vaginal sex; genital-genital contact; sharing sex toys; and birth to an infected woman.
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.
Yes a woman can have had chlamydia and have a healthy normal birth; even being infected precautions can be taken to minimize risks to the infant.
Chlamydia trachomatis is the scientific name for the bacteria that causes chlamydia.
Yes, you can get infected with chlamydia even if he doesn't ejaculate inside you. Chlamydia can be spread by semen, vaginal discharge, or preejaculate fluid in or near the vaginal, urethra, or anus, as well as the throat and eyes.
There are no special food restrictions or recommendations for people with chlamydia, except that if you're being treated with doxycycline, you should separate dairy food and your antibiotic by three hours.
No, but you should be abstaining from sex while being treated for chlamydia, so your birth control effectiveness is not an issue, right?