Yes you can you still have a STD if there is no bacteria in your urine.
Bacteriuria is the presence of bacteria in the urine, which may indicate a urinary tract infection. It can be detected through a urine culture test.
It means that the urine sample contains 10,000 colonies of bacteria per milliliter. This indicates a significant amount of bacteria in the urine, which may suggest a urinary tract infection.
Bacteriuria is the presence of bacteria in the urine.
Yes, blood in urine can be a symptom of both STDs (sexually transmitted diseases) and UTIs (urinary tract infections). It is important to see a healthcare provider for proper diagnosis and treatment.
16 pints =2 gallonsUrinary tract infection. You will need to go to the doctor to get antibiotics. You can also drink crandberry juice and take a product called AZO, but the best method is to get antibiotics.
Most STD's are caused by Bacteria. To give a few examples: Syphilis, Gonorrhea, Chlamydia... (etc)
Urine is basically sterile unless you have an infection. Feces are FULL of bacteria. But you should not get in the habit of drinking urine! It is still body waste.
Urine actually has little bacteria to begin with. A lot of the filtrate are salts, water and food pigments that pass through the blood stream. If the person is sick, there could be some of the bacteria that caused the illness in urine. Urine accumulates bacteria very fast. Urine is more or less sterile as it leaves the body. The most common pathogen in the urine is E. coli.
Bacteriuria is the presence of bacteria in the urine, which may indicate a urinary tract infection. It can be detected through a urine culture test.
Most probably you are having a "Urinal Tract Infection" or UTI which is still in early stage.
Bacteriuria. It is a condition where bacteria are present in the urine, and it can sometimes indicate a urinary tract infection.
Chlamydia is an STD caused by the bacteria Chlamydia trachomatis. Other STDs do not cause, turn into, or lead to chlamydia.
no itis not ok to drink womens urine it has bacteria and is different from mens urine
No. Normal urine should be sterile.
It means that the urine sample contains 10,000 colonies of bacteria per milliliter. This indicates a significant amount of bacteria in the urine, which may suggest a urinary tract infection.
Urine is sterile, assuming no urinary tract infection. HIV is not shed in urine of HIV infected persons. There might be a theoretical risk of STD transmission as the urine picks up traces of chlamydia, gonorrhea, herpes, etc passing over genital tissues. But to my knowledge nobody has ever acquired an STD by exposure to urine.
"Mid-flow clean catch" urine from a healthy organism should be free of microbes. Urine from the beginning of the flow may contain bacteria washed from the perianal region. Bacteria in the urine would indicate an infection.