Chlamydia is contracted with the bacteria make contact with your mucous membranes. It happens during sexual contact.
Chlamydia doesn't typically cause odor. See your health care provider for a recheck. You may have contracted trichomoniasis as well as chlamydia.
Chlamydia can only live outside the body for minutes. You can't get it from sharing a sponge.
Yes, it is possible.
There is no connection between too much sugar and chlamydia. Chlamdydia is contracted through intimate contact with an infected person.
Chlamydia does not affect the outside of your body, and shows no external signs other than red eye if you get chlamydial conjunctivitis.
Once chlamydia is contracted, the only available treatment is antibiotics. Although studies are always being done to search for new treatments for STDs, there are not any other options at this time.
inside when its outside is outside because inside is outside answer = outsidesame with outside being inside answer = inside
Chlamydia can't live in water. The bacteria can live for only a few minutes outside the body.
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.
Chlamydia becomes active as soon as it enters the body.
Inside and outside are spelled exactly as written.
A pap smear does not detect chlamydia. A pap smear can not detect chlamydia, and a negative Pap smear does not indicate that you don't have chlamydia. So, yes, it's possible to have a Pap test for four years and not know you have chlamydia if your health care provider didn't do a specific test for chlamydia. Did your health care provider actually test for chlamydia in the prior four years? First check with your health care provider, and then you can try to figure out how you might have contracted it, if in fact you had a negative test as soon as a year ago.