Chlamydia is not a blood borne disease, and is not in the blood.
No. It would have infected the person before 3 weeks.
1-3 weeks after contact.
You can take a shower if you have Chlamydia.
Not sure. But since niacin does not clean drugs out of your system, it's really a moot point.
Sometimes chlamydia surface antigens change, and make it hard for the immune system to keep up. It also appears that chlamydia may release toxins that damage the immune response in some cases. (see related link).
Chlamydia is curable whether or not someone has HIV.
You must take antibiotics to get rid of chlamydia.
No, you get chlamydia from having sex with someone who has the germ.
Chlamydia can live on your finger for just a few minutes.
No, you can take ibuprofen without affecting treatment of chlamydia.
Acute symptoms of chlamydia in females will go away within a couple of weeks of completing treatment. If chlamydia cause caused scarring and damage via PID, symptoms may be chronic and lifelong.
Chlamydia in the urethra affects the urinary system. Chlamydia in the epididymis, cervix, testes, uterus, or ovaries affects the reproductive system. Chlamydia in the anus or throat affects the digestive system. In babies born with chlamydia, chlamydia can affect the respiratory system and cause pneumonia. Chlamydia can affect the integumentary system by causing conjunctivitis.
Chlamydia was known as a cause of certain diseasses before 1910.
Yes, having chlamydia once can harm you, but most people are cured of chlamydia without long-term effects.