It depends which STD. HIV may develop into AIDS Syphilis eventually affects the brain. Gonorrhoea and chlamydia may make you infertile.
What will happen if an std is left untreated depends on the std.
One cures itself. It would go away if people with it would not have sex or use condoms.
Another gradually eats away the Brain before it caused death.
Another destroys the immune system before it causes death.
Other stds have different outcomes.
Delayed diagnosis and treatment of STDs can lead to long term problems. You also may pass the STD on to your partner.
No. It could lead to death. STupID quEStiON!!
Sexually Transmitted Infections are developing Sexually Transmitted Diseases which include damage of Urinary Tract System, Fallopian Tubes, Uterus, Vagina, etc. Not-treated diseases could be causes of infertility, serious UT diseases, Vaginal itching and discharge. You can discover effects of each STD in recommended related link.
The infection or disease can get worse and most likely start to hurt. I urge you to go check check out by a doctor and get prescription.
For a female, chronic pain, sterility and PID; for a male epididymitis, prostatitis, and/or sterility.
Untreated chlamydia infection could also increase the risk of ectopic pregnancy (when the fertilized egg implants and develops outside the uterus.)
Furthermore, chlamydia may cause premature births (giving birth too early) and the infection can be passed along from the mother to her child during childbirth, causing an eye infection, blindness, or pneumonia in the newborn.
Chlamydia is also associated with Reiter's syndrome, a collection of symptoms that includes Arthritis.
Chlamydia can cause infertility in women, or ectopic pregnancies. It can also cause severe pelvic inflammatory disease. If you aren't being treated, you're also more likely to catch HIV while you have Chlamydia.
A male with chlamydia may have inflammation of the testes, prostate, or epididymis if the infection is untreated. These complications can affect fertility. Chlamydia can damage the body, but the germ is gone after effective treatment is completed. Patients being treated should avoid oral, anal, and vaginal intercourse until 7 days after one-dose treatment, or until seven-day treatment is completed.
If chlamydia is left untreated, a woman may get pelvic inflammatory disease (PID). PID can cause scarring and can eventually lead to infertility in females, or can increase the risk of future ectopic pregnancy.
Untreated chlamydia and gonorrhea can result in chronic pelvic pain or PID. In addition, they can cause infertility.
Untreated trichomoniasis has no long-term effects. Untreated chlamydia can lead to sterility or chronic pelvic pain.
Yes, in the case of chlamydia or gonorrhea
Untreated infections, cancer, physical injuries, diseases like Chlamydia going untreated for a long time.
Yes. You should abstain from vaginal sex or use contraception if you don't want to get pregnant. Untreated chlamydia and gonorrhea can cause scarring which can impair fertility, but a history of gonorrhea and/or chlamydia doesn't mean you can't get pregnant.
It is gonorrhea that is a diplococcus, not chlamydia.
Yes, a man with chlamydia can get a woman pregnant, and infect her with chlamydia as well. You should abstain from vaginal sex or use contraception if you don't want to get pregnant. Untreated chlamydia and gonorrhea can cause scarring which can impair fertility, but a history of gonorrhea and/or chlamydia doesn't mean you can't get pregnant.
There is little chance of a mother infecting a baby with gonorrhea after birth. For humans already born, gonorrhea can only be transmitted from genital-genital or oral-genital contact.Gonorrhea can still be transmitted via fluids even if a man does not ejaculate. Gonorrhea can also be spread from an untreated mother to her baby during childbirth.
Cocci and bacilli do not cause chlamydia. Cocci cause gonorrhea.
Gonorrhea, chlamydia, and trichomoniasis can have very similar symptoms.
Yes, you can be infertile after having chlamydia, but most people who had chlamydia are not infertile. You should abstain from vaginal sex or use contraception if you don't want to get pregnant. Untreated chlamydia and gonorrhea can cause scarring which can impair fertility, but a history of chlamydia doesn't mean you can't get pregnant. In women, one in five with chlamydia develops pelvic inflammatory disease, sometimes without knowing. Of that fraction, one in five will be infertile.
Yes, you can be infertile after having chlamydia, but most people who had chlamydia are not infertile. You should abstain from vaginal sex or use contraception if you don't want to get pregnant. Untreated chlamydia and gonorrhea can cause scarring which can impair fertility, but a history of chlamydia doesn't mean you can't get pregnant. In women, one in five with chlamydia develops pelvic inflammatory disease, sometimes without knowing. Of that fraction, one in five will be infertile.
Yes, you can be infertile after having chlamydia, but most people who had chlamydia are not infertile. You should abstain from vaginal sex or use contraception if you don't want to get pregnant. Untreated chlamydia and gonorrhea can cause scarring which can impair fertility, but a history of chlamydia doesn't mean you can't get pregnant. In women, one in five with chlamydia develops pelvic inflammatory disease, sometimes without knowing. Of that fraction, one in five will be infertile.
Yes, you can be infertile after having chlamydia, but most people who had chlamydia are not infertile. You should abstain from vaginal sex or use contraception if you don't want to get pregnant. Untreated chlamydia and gonorrhea can cause scarring which can impair fertility, but a history of chlamydia doesn't mean you can't get pregnant. In women, one in five with chlamydia develops pelvic inflammatory disease, sometimes without knowing. Of that fraction, one in five will be infertile.