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.
Recurrent vaginal infections don't cause or turn into chlamydia. Chlamydia is caused by a bacterium that is spread through oral, anal, and vaginal sex; genital-genital contact; sharing sex toys; and birth to a woman who has chlamydia.
Eutocia is the medical term meaning normal, healthy labor and childbirth. In contract, dystocia is the term meaning abnormal or difficult labor and birth.
Babies get chlamydia during vaginal birth to an infected mother. They don't get infected before birth. An infected baby must be treated.
Your baby is likely to be born blind if you are infected with chlamydia at the time of delivery. It is incredibly irresponsible and unethical to leave such an infection untreated while pregnant.
No, but you should be abstaining from sex while being treated for chlamydia, so your birth control effectiveness is not an issue, right?
Lab workers using normal standard precautions will not be infected with chlamydia at work.
No, you wouilldn't necessarily know if you were born with chlamydia. There have been cases in which children with lung problems were diagnosed with chlamydia years after birth.
Ok, she is healthy and will give birth to healthy kits. There is nothing to worry about, that is normal :)
A young, healthy person with Chlamydia pneumoniae has an excellent prognosis. In the elderly, however, there is a 5-10% death rate from this infection.
No, you can't get chlamydia from a chair. It's spread by oral, anal, and vaginal sex with an infected partner, or genital-genital contact with someone infected. Also, a baby born to a mother with chlamydia can get chlamydia during birth.
You can't get chlamydia from sharing a straw. Chlamydia is spread by oral, anal, and vaginal sex; genital-genital contact; sharing sex toys; and birth to an infected mother.
No..chlamydia is a sexually transmitted disease you get it through bodily fluids if that person has it. You can get chlamydia from oral, anal, or vaginal sex; genital-genital contact; sharing sex toys; or birth to a woman with chlamydia.