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.
Ciprofloxacin is an opiate and can show up on a drug test, so it is important to share information about your medications prior to taking the test.
Yes, it is very possible. Many people can carry a bacteria or virus, then transfer it to another person (chlamydia and meningitis are good examples), and it is often that the second person gets the disease, without the first person ever being aware of their dangerous status.
If you're diagnosed with chlamydia you should tell all your partners from at least the last 60 days.
There are a few possible explanations. The most likely is that you contracted chlamydia within those three months. Another possibility is that you got the first test so soon after infection that it could not yet be detected. A false negative or false positive test is another possible explanation.
You may get positive leukocytes on a urine dip, but a person can have chlamydia and have no changes in urine other than those detected by a specific chlamydia test.
A chlamydia culture is a particular type of chlamydia test that tries to grow the bacteria from a sample of body fluid. It is very difficult to do correctly, and so is not a very reliable test. A positive chlamydia culture can be believed, but there are many false negative chlamydia cultures. Talk with your health care provider about the right chlamydia test for your situation.
To get chlamydia test results, contact the health care provider that did the test.
Chlamydia does not affect the accuracy of a chlamydia test.
Yes, you can catch chlamydia from someone even if you're taking antibiotics when you have sex with that person.
The requirements for partner tracing for chlamydia vary from one county to another. You can contact your county health department to inquire about their practices.
The chances of a false negative chlamydia test result with the newest test kits may be as high as 10%. The chances of two false negative results are 1%, and of three are one in one thousand. Having a negative result followed by a positive normally means that you were infected with chlamydia between the first and second test.
Home tests for sexually transmitted diseases like chlamydia typically work by detecting chemical compounds present in a person who tests positive for chlamydia and it usually changes colour or displays a sign.