Yes you can still have a baby.
The genital warts is a wild guess, but they can pass from mother to baby and lie dormant for a while.Please make an appoinment to see your doctor, permanent diarrhoea is not good and the cause needs to be found
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 genital herpes from irritating the tissues from a baby wipe.
No. I assume that by A you mean you are A+. Since you have Rh+ blood, there is no risk in carrying a baby with Rh+ or Rh- blood. A woman who is Rh- can still have a baby with an Rh+ partner as long as she is treated and the doctor is aware of the partner's blood type.
The saddest thing that no one, including the CDC, ever tells people in public health information concerning genital warts - is that they are NOT spread just by sexual contact. Warts can spread to the genitals from a wart anywhere else on the body. Warts on the hands, or touched by the hands before contact with the genitals, can develop into genital warts by such non-sexual events such as inserting hemorrhoid suppository, or vaginal diaphragm insertion, or a shared towel. It need not even be direct wart to skin contact. It can even be wart to shared surface to skin. HPV is a very durable virus, & can live many hours outside the body on both solid & porous surfaces, such as shared towels, bathroom floors, door knobs, faucets, & more. That's why such a large part of the population has at least 1 wart somewhere on their body. Molestation is always a possibility when venereal warts are found on a child. But it's also possible that someone who changed the child's diapers who had warts on their hands could have been the carrier, or from a wart on the child's own hands from rectal itching or their own natural curiosity. Given the 3+ month incubation time for HPV, the original time & source of infection may be indeterminable. I don't know how many posts I've seen where couples married 10-30 years suddenly turn up with genital warts, & wonder how an STD can possibly turn up after so long, & even who may have strayed in the marriage... When the truth is, the warts could easily have come from their partner's, or from their very own, hands. It's a real pity that no one ever tells us these things, & that the public is lead to assume that venereal warts only arise from careless & likely unscrupulous bedroom activity... My advice is - intermittently check your hands & body for warts. Also, check your partner's. If you see any warts, & there are a variety of types, treat them. Wash your hands frequently, & always think twice about where you put your hands, & where you let other people put theirs. Good health & good luck to you & your niece... & to everyone else with similar concerns.
Absolutely YES! Genital herpes may be passed from one person to another through close physical contact. This means sex and practically anything else that can lead to sex. This includes kissing, oral sex, anal sex, etcetera. Genital herpes does not keep you from getting pregnant. In fact, if you or your partner have genital herpes you should see a doctor immediately. The doctor can show you how to use safer birth control so you don't pass the herpes virus to each other (or anyone else) and do his/her best to make sure you don't get pregnant. Babies born to mothers with Herpes generally contract herpes when they are born from the vagina. Many times, women with genital herpes are forced to have a caesarean delivery (when they cut her tummy open and get the baby out) just to protect the baby from getting Herpes. This is VERY SERIOUS! See a doctor and learn what to do to protect yourself and your partner and NOT get pregnant until you learn more.
Your body will go back to the way it was before birth. There is no reason you can not please your partner, before, during and after a pregnancy.
You will have a baby when you are ready and talk to your partner about the situation.
no not if you "dont worry about baby, its ok
There is little chance of a mother infecting a baby with gonorrhea after birth. For humans already born, gonorrhea can only be transmitted from genital-genital or oral-genital contact.Gonorrhea can still be transmitted via fluids even if a man does not ejaculate. Gonorrhea can also be spread from an untreated mother to her baby during childbirth.
No he has a partner and a baby
The Obstetrician can usually determine the sex of a baby still in utero by using the ultrasound scan technology that they use to generally check the health and development of the baby before it is born. They usually use the "three lines test", whereby they look for the presence or absence of 3 parallel white lines in the genital area of the baby. These 3 lines are the developing vagina. It is not possible to view a penis with this technology. Therefore if no lines are seen the Obstetrician assumes this is because the baby is male. However sometimes the reason no lines are seen is because the baby's arm or leg was obstructing the genital area and the baby may still turn out to be female. Of course, if the lines are seen the baby is definitely female.