No, it would not be safe to have the instrumentation in your cervix while you have chlamydia. For this reason, and to increase the rate of success, fertility treatment providers test for chlamydia before starting the IVF cycle. If you're infected, it will take just seven days to cure you and your partner, so the delay will be brief.
You should not try to become pregnant when you have chlamydia. Please consult the physician. He will treat your chlamydia infection. Then you can try to have the baby.
No, your baby will not catch chlamydia. If you believe you could be infected, and you are pregnant, see your doctor soon.
You can't answer the question of whose baby it is based on the chlamydia tests.
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.
Chlamydia will stay in a baby until treated. Children with lung infections may remain undiagnosed for years.
If the infection is cured, there is no risk to having a baby.
Chlamydia can be transmitted during vaginal, anal, or oral sex. Chlamydia can also be passed from an infected mother to her baby during vaginal childbirth.
If the mother has chlamydia when the baby was born.
You can't get chlamydia or gonorrhea that way. Chlamydia is caused by bacteria spread by oral, anal, or vaginal sex; genital-genital contact; sharing sex toys; or birth to an infected woman.
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.
A baby would get chlamydia one of two ways; during vaginal birth to an infected mother, or sexual abuse.
Possibly. If you were exposed to chlamydia, you should get tested, even if you were on antibiotics at the time.
A baby can have pneumonia due to chlamydia trachomatis, the bacteria that causes the STD known as chlamydia. This type of pneumonia is not normally spread from the baby to others. A different bacteria, Chlamydia pneumonia, is a common cause of bronchitis and pneumonia, and can be contagious. It is spread through airborne transmission, not by sex.