Yes, men can give chlamydia to men and women can give chlamydia to women.Yes, a female can get chlamydia from a female, and a male can get chlamydia from a male
Yes, a female can pass chlamydia to a male or a female partner. Chlamydia is spread from oral, anal, and vaginal sex; genital-genital contact; sharing sex toys; and birth to a woman with chlamydia. If you get it and have sex with someone else it passes on again. If you think you may have it then go and get treatment straight away.No; men and women can pass chlamydia if infected.
Sweat does not carry chlamydia and can't transmit chlamydia.
It is easier to pass chlamydia.
Yes. Transmission is a chance. For chlamydia, its better than a coin toss, but still high. An infected male transmits to a female at about 40%. An infected female transmits to a male at about 33%.
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.
Yes, that's possible. 80-90% of females and many males have no symptoms of chlamydia.
Yes, a female or a male partner may be first to have chlamydia. Although women have more reported cases of chlamydia, this fact is likely due to increased screening in women. Other studies screening men and women equally show that both genders are equally likely to have chlamydia.
A woman can get chlamydia at 92.
Chlamydia can spread from the genitals to higher locations in the reproductive tract. For instance, in a female it can spread from the vagina to the fallopian tubes and pelvis, causing pelvic inflammatory disease. In a male, the infection can spread from the urethra to the epididymis. However, the infection can't spread from your throat to your vagina, or from your eyes to your penis, unless you transmit the bacterium from one location to the other with your hands.
Samples are collected from one or more of these infection sites: cervix, vagina, or urethra in a female, urethra in a male, or the throat or rectum. But chlamydia cultures are uncommon these days. Usually other types of testing are used for chlamydia.
Female transmit 23 chromosomes to the offspring. She has that unique chromosome called as X chromosome. This is transmitted to the offspring. From male you get either X or Y chromosome. From XX chromosome you get female child. From XY chromosome you get male child.