Chlamydia can be transmitted through vaginal, anal, or oral sex with an infected partner. Chlamydia is spread by coming in contact with the discharge
It is certainly possible, but highly unlikely.
You can not get Chlamydia if someone had it but they only touched you.
Chlamydia is spread by body fluids. If your fingers have significant body fluids on them and you touch your mucous membranes, you can transmit it. Chlamydia can live for only a few minutes outside the body, though.
Thrush and chlamydia are caused by two separate germs. You catch chlamydia by having oral, anal, or vaginal sex with someone who is infected.
Chlamydia infects the throat, not the mouth, and lives for only a few minutes outside your body. It is unlikely to get pharyngeal chlamydia this way.
No, normally you can not. It is possible to get Chlamidia from sucking your partners finger or from them sucking yours that has some juices still left on them.
It may be possible, but it isn't very likely.
Chlamydia does not infect wounds. It infects mucous membranes, like the vagina, urethra, and anus.
Yes you can.
Sweat does not carry chlamydia and can't transmit chlamydia.
It is easier to pass chlamydia.
Birds don't get or transmit chlamydia trachomatis, the germ that causes the sexually transmitted infection. Birds may transmit chlamydia psittaci, which is not sexually transmitted.
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!
Yes, chlamydia can be transmitted orally.You can catch chlamydia orally.Yes, a male can catch or transmit chlamydia orally.It would depend. if the infection is oral, then yes. Chlamydia is a micro-organism, specifically the bacterium, Chlamydia trachomatis, one that attacks mucous membranes. The mouth is one of the sites it can infect, and can be passed from mouth to mouth, or any infected site to any other mucous membrane.
It is theoretically possible to transfer chlamydia by mouth to vagina, but it is believed that chlamydia is rarely transmitted to females through oral sex. The reason is that chlamydia does not infect the mouth, but only the throat. It is possible for a male to get chlamydia from oral sex, but cunnilingus and anilingus do not appear to be high-risk activities for transmitting chlamydia.
Saliva does not transmit HIV.
Minimal genital-genital contact can transmit chlamydia. Use a condom before oral, anal, or vaginal sex or genital-genital contact.
Yes; it is possible to transmit in this manner.
You can pass chlamydia even with a condom, even if you don't have symptoms. Abstain from sex until seven days after the last partner completed treatment.
Yes, you can still love a partner even if you think he gave you chlamydia. In a new relationship, it's not unusual for one partner to have chlamydia without knowing, and to transmit it to a partner. On the other hand, if you think he may be unfaithful and putting you at risk for STDs without your knowledge, you'll have to consider your own health and safety from continuing to have sexual contact with him.
If you have a cold and cough by covering up your mouth with your hand, then you touch someone you can transmit your cold germs to them.