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.
Depending on how long he waits after taking the antibiotics (say 2 weeks), the results should be negative.
Both partners should be tested; you should not assume that you are negative for STDs based on your partner's test. Various situations can lead to one partner being negative and another positive. Don't take a chance.
You might have gotten chlamydia from somewhere else, you could have some other infection, your partner could have had a false negative result, or you might have some other non-infectious problem. You should not rely on a partner's result to determine whether or not you have an infection. If you have pain or discharge, you should get tested.
If he sticks to the treatment regimen there's a high probability YES. He's also cured.If you tested negative, you will not pass it on. If he has it, he caught it from another partner.
If you took an adequate dose of ciprofloxacin to cure chlamydia, the chlamydia test should be negative as long as you didn't get tested too soon after treatment.
Anyone who is sexually active can acquire chlamydia. This is why it's important to talk to your sexual partner about their sexual history, if they've been tested, and ALWAYS use protection.
You can get chlamydia from someone who is infected. The partner's cleanliness has nothing to do with it.
A special chlamydia throat swab tests for chlamydia in your throat.
To know if you were tested for chlamydia, you must ask your health care provider. Although routine chlamydia testing is recommended annually for women 26 and under, and when someone has a new partner, many health care providers do not carefully follow this recommendation.
A negative chlamydia test means you are not infected with the bacteria.
Just get tested and treated, and if you have any further procedures, abstain from intercourse according to the directions given by your health care provider. There are no special chlamydia risks with an open wound, but there are other risks -- if your partner has chlamydia, the parnter has put him/herself at risk for bloodborne pathogens like HIV and hepatitis as well.
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.
Chlamydia trachomatis is coccoid and gram negative.