You can't develop chlamydia on your own. You can only get the bacteria from someone who has it.
Having chlamydia does not make you pregnant.
You can't reinfect yourself or affect your treatment if you taste yourself while getting treated for chlamydia. Masturbation and orgasm also don't affect how well treatment works.
No, chlamydia cannot make your penis fall off.
Chlamydia won't make your cervix stay high.
Uncomplicated chlamydia will not cause a bad back, although there appears to be some connection between chlamydia infection (both sexually transmitted Chlamydia trachomatis and non-STD Chlamydia pneumonia) and ankylosing spondylitis. Chlamydia may make you feel ill.
You won't reinfect yourself with chlamydia from the vaginal insert used to treat yeast. Chlamydia can live for only a short time outside the body, and washing and rinsing the insert is more than enough.
Chlamydia is not a blood-borne diseases. Plasma centers and blood banks do not test for it. Get yourself tested if you're at risk.
Chlamydia can't make its own energy, so it uses ATP from the host cell.
Chlamydia is contracted with the bacteria make contact with your mucous membranes. It happens during sexual contact.
Chlamydia can't live for more than a few minutes outside your body. Washing your clothes regularly is a good health practice, but you can't reinfect yourself with chlamydia by wearing unwashed clothes that you wore before treatment.
Pus cells from chlamydia may change the appearance of urine. Get tested if you think you're at risk of STDs.
The scientific name for chlamydia is Chlamydia trachomatis.