During chlamydia treatment you should avoid oral, anal, and vaginal sex, as well as genital-genital contact. Don't even do these things with a condom.
Specific things to avoid are specific to the medications you're on as well. Ask your health care provider or pharmacist for instructions based on your medication. For instance, if you're on doxycycline, you should protect yourself against the sun until treatment is complete, and you shouldn't take the medication at the same time as dairy foods or calcium supplements; for azithromycin, you should avoid taking over-the-counter medications at the same time without checking with the pharmacist first.
In order to avoid reinfecion with chlamydia, a patient must avoid oral, anal, and vaginal sex (even with a condom), genital-genital contact, and sharing sex toys for seven days after one-dose treatment for chlamydia or for the seven days of week-long treatment for chlamydia. After treatment of all partners and the waiting period are complete, condoms can lower the risk of reinfection with chlamydia or infecdtion with another STD.
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 for seven days after single-dose treatment, or until seven-day treatment is complete.
Treatment for chlamydia is very effective. Reinfection, though, is common. Patients being treated should avoid oral, anal, and vaginal intercourse, even with a condom, until 7 days after single-dose treatment, or until finishing seven-day treatment. Any damage from chlamydia is not reversible.
Yes, when you are getting treated you can still transmit chlamydia. Patients being treated should avoid oral, anal, and vaginal intercourse (even with a condom) until seven days after single-dose treatment, or until seven-day treatment is complete.
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 1-2 weeks have passed since treatment was completed.
Two grams of metronodazole is the one-day treatment for trichomoniasis. Although the treatment is a single dose, you should avoid sex for seven days after treatment -- even sex with a condom.
Chlamydia can be a chronic or temporary disease. Ideally, a patient quickly learns about the infection and gets treatment; this treatment is completely curative and long-term infection will not occur. In addition, some patients will clear chlamydia without antibiotics, although nobody infected with chlamydia should avoid antibiotics. If chlamydia is left untreated, it can cause chronic complications, but these complications may persist after chlamydia is cleared with effective treatment. Lastly, it's possible to have untreated chlamydia for years without knowing. In that sense, chlamydia may be chronic.
If you have chlamydia you should avoid oral, anal, and vaginal sex as well as genital-genital contact until seven days after single-dose treatment, or until seven day treatment is complete. Don't even engage in these activities with a condom -- just abstain.
If you think you have chlamydia, go to your local health department, family planning center, primary care provider, or urgent care to be checked. If you have chlamydia, you need to be treated to get rid of the bacteria. You should get testing and treatment as soon as possible. Until you get these results, you should avoid oral, anal and vaginal sex, and genital-genital contact. Don't even do these things with a condom until you've been tested.
As long as you don't transfer fluids from your finger to your eyes or genitals, you won't get chlamydia from fingering someone. However, you only need to abstain for seven days. For the sake of your health and that of your partner, find something else to do for this brief period of time.
Chlamydia trachomatis treatment is commonly with medicines such as doxycycline or azithromycin. It is mandatory that the partner is also tested and treated at the same time because otherwise it is very likely to get re-infected. Also, sexual relations should be avoided until the treatment is finished. Treatment is normally administered orally, especially in men but severe infections in women might require hospitalization. In the end, male treatment for Chlamydia is not different than the treatment that women receive but it is mandatory to be given as soon as possible to avoid possible unwanted complications.
Both medications are listed by the CDC for treatment of chlamydia. Doxycycline used to be cheaper, and azithromycin easier to take, but since the 2013 doxycycline shortage started, azithromycin is both cheaper and easier.