Chlamydia doesn't cause HIV or gonorrhea, but all patients with gonorrhea should be evaluated for all STIs.
Chlamydia can damage the body, but the germ is gone after effective treatment is completed. Take the medicine, hope for the best, and protect your reproductive system from further insult.
Gonorrhea is typically a reproductive tract infection, locating in the penis in the male and the vagina in the female. However, it is possible for gonorrhea to transit to the urinary tract in both genders due to the proximity of the urethra to the reproductive tract.
should i be worried about this bump at the corner of my right ears?
A normal blood test will not detect the infection. To diagnose chlamydia, you need a urine test or swab of the vagina, urethra, rectum, throat, or eye. Blood tests can look for evidence of past infection with chlamydia, but these are of no use in determining current infection and aren't used to diagnose or treat disease.
No, but you should be abstaining from sex while being treated for chlamydia, so your birth control effectiveness is not an issue, right?
You should be worried that someone raped you in the first place, right?
Urine tests are effective for testing chlamydia, as long as the right test is ordered. A routine urinalysis or urine culture will not detect chlamydia. The specific chlamydia test needs to be ordered. There is a DNA amplification test that can be performed for chlamydia and gonorrhea on a urine sample. The urine, however, should not be a midstream sample - it should be the first urine that is urinated to get any of the bacteria that were growing in the urethra.
Your health care provider is used to talking about chlamydia. First, say, "I'd like to be tested for chlamydia." Your health care provider should as if you've had oral, anal, or vaginal sex so that the right test specimen is used. If you know that a partner has been diagnosed with chlamydia, be sure to say so, as you might like to get treated that day while waiting for the results.
No you should not be worried at all. I just skipped six months and my doctor said I was fine. But if your period is usually right on time you might wanna talk to someone.
A baby infected with chlamydia during birth can have conjunctivitis which, if left untreated or inadequately treated, can affect vision. Prompt treatment will prevent complications from this infection.
Yes it can be.
Yes, it is. You should not be worried just visit your doctor.
No, don't worry. Just next time you masturbate with your fingers, do it in front of a mirror so you can see exactly how to get it into your vagina.