50% of men infected show symptoms of chlamydia.
No damage will be done from 2 weeks of chlamydia infection.
The incubation period -- the time between getting infected and having symptoms -- is one to three weeks for chlamydia in those people who get symptoms. But 80-90% of females and half of males get no symptoms.
If you were tested before 3 weeks after infection, the test could have turned up false.
According to the CDC, up to 70%-85% of women have no symptoms of Trich ("Trick"). Trichomoniasis affects both males and females, and both sexes can pass this STD to other sexual contacts. Get examined, get treated, and be protected. Always use condoms.
Yes, 80-90% of females and many males with chlamydia have no symptoms. Chlamydia can cause damage to the body, but it is easily curable with antibiotics. After effective treatment, the germ is gone. Patients should abstain from oral, anal, and vaginal sex before treatment and for 7 days after single-dose treatment, or until 7-day treatment is completed.
You shouldn't go at all. You need to make an appointment with your doctor as soon as possible before it spread or gets worse.
Chlamydia is not a blood borne disease, and is not in the blood.
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.
Chlamydia doesn't typically cause odor. See your health care provider for a recheck. You may have contracted trichomoniasis as well as chlamydia.
It can happen almost immediately after coming in contact with the bacteria. If symptoms do occur, they may not appear until several weeks after exposure. But 50% of males and 80-90% of females have no symptoms when they have chlamydia.
If your symptoms did not disappear after chlamydia treatment, you should contact your health care provider. You could have an additional infection, or could have a complicated cause requiring longer treatment.
Chlamydia is an infection and if you are sexually active it is the only way you could have come into contact with it. Once you have it you can pass it on. You will need to confirm you have it by being tested.