Some mistook chlamydia for a virus because it's an obligate intracellular parasite.
Chlamydia is not a virus; it is a bacteria.
No, chlamydia is a bacteria.
Dunno. It's not a virus.
Chlamydia is a disease, but is not considered to be caused by a virus. It is an obligate intracellular parasite due to it having a lipopolysaccharide wall, resembling that of gram-negative bacteria. Therefore, it is considered to be caused by bacteria, not a virus.
Both chlamydia and UTI can cause burning with urination. Testing will easily differentiate between the two.
Trachoma is caused by chlamydia and is an infection of the eye.
No. HIV virus is different from chlamydia, although they share risk factors. Someone diagnosed with one should be tested for the other.
No. Chlamydia is a bacterial infection that is sexually transmitted. HIV is the virus that causes AIDS.
virus
A yeast infection is diagnosed by looking at vaginal discharge under a microscope. Chlamydia is diagnosed via a cervical swab or urine test. If laboratory testing is used, you can't mistake one for the other.
Mucus is produced in many location, some that may and some that may not be infected with chlamydia. You can get chlamydia from semen, pre-ejaculate, and vaginal fluid.
No, but most antivirus programs will mistake it for a virus because of how it works.