No. Chlamydia can damage the body, but the germ is gone after effective treatment is completed. Patients being treated should avoid oral, anal, and vaginal intercourse until seven days after one-dose treatment, or until seven-day treatment is complete.
Yes, if you have sex before giving the antibiotics enough time to kill all the chlamydia bacteria. You should avoid anal, oral, and vaginal sex, and sharing sex toys, until seven days after single-dose treatment, or until seven-day treatment is complete. Don't even have sex with a condom. Reinfection is very common, and so retesting in three to four months is important.
No. Chlamydia can damage the body, but the germ is gone after effective treatment is completed. Patients being treated should avoid oral, anal, and vaginal intercourse until 1-2 weeks have passed since treatment was completed.
You can not give chlamydia back to yourself. Chlamydia lives for just a few minutes outside the body.
You can't give yourself chlamydia after effective treatment.
You can get chlamydia twice and have the same symptoms, or symptoms may be present once and absent the other time, or symptoms may be slightly different.
You can have symptoms the second time you get chlamydia.
The CDC recommends retesting two to three months after treatment to make sure you didn't catch chlamydia again. However, treatments are realiable, and the CDC does not recommend test of cure.
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.
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.
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.
You can't develop chlamydia on your own. You can only get the bacteria from someone who has it.
Chlamydia is a curable infection. Unless your partner was tested in the brief amount of time before they could test positive for the bacteria, it is unlikely you would reinfect them.
100% yes. However, when you put your files back on your computer, you may reinfect yourself!
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.
Yes, you definitely can! The article below explains how reinfection via your toothbrush happens and how to clean it to prevent reinfecting yourself and get healthy faster. http://askthedentist.com/is-your-toothbrush-making-you-sick
Yes, and it's often given that way after a sexual assault. But how do you know that the STD, and the only STD, that your partner has is chlamydia? Get tested for STDs, reduce your risk by abstaining or using condoms or reducing the number of partners, and make sure that you and your partner don't reinfect each other by having sex before the medication has worked completely.
If that happens, you'll need to repeat treatment. You will continue to be contagious after taking Zithromax 1 g until 7 days have passed. You should abstain from oral, anal, or vaginal sex during that seven days. A repeat test is recommended in 2-3 months, for precisely the reason you asked about -- so many people immediately reinfect themselves with chlamydia that it's worth the time to retest.
"Chlamydia probe" is a name for a chlamydia swab.
There are three major types of Chlamydia: Chlamydia psittaci, Chlamydia pneumoniae, and Chlamydia trachomatis. Each of these has the potential to cause a type of pneumonia.