At this point, there should no longer be an indeterminate test results for chlamydia or gonorrhea. Some years ago, labs reported "low positive" NAAT results as indeterminate. The CDC now requires these to be reported as positive.
No, sex during menstruation does not cause gonorrhea. Gonorrhea is an STD, it would be transmitted via sex.
A bladder infection would be the most common cause. You should consult a doctor as soon as possible.
It would not be likely to catch the infection from a razor; but the infection can be on a washcloth or towel.It is not likely to get gonorrhea from a razor blade, but the bacteria can live outside the body for up to 2 hours. I would not share razors or towels with someone that has a STD.
You would lower your risk of complication from untreated chlamydia.
Blood does not transfer chlamydia, so you would not catch it.
If your boyfriend performed oral sex on you while you had chlamydia it could be transferred to his mouth orally. He would still have to have chlamydia sores present in his mouth in order to transfer chlamydia to you. It is rare chlamydia is in the mouth, because in order for it to be there, the mouth would have to have direct contact with the sore. That is why you can have chlamydia in your body, but you can still kiss your mate and he won't get chlamydia. Hope this helps!
No, you wouilldn't necessarily know if you were born with chlamydia. There have been cases in which children with lung problems were diagnosed with chlamydia years after birth.
Chlamydia can only live outside the body for minutes. You can't get it from sharing a sponge.
Depending on his age and whether hes sexually active or not, it could possibly be gonorrhea
Urinating within hours of the urine or swab test, not using the first urine that comes out, or inadequate swabbing can all cause a false negative chlamydia test. In addition, testing too soon after exposure, or recent exposure to partially effective antibiotics could cause a negative test that would be positive within a couple of more weeks.
It would not be likely to get it in a lab.
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.