If you think about it, you'll realize that nobody has done that research. It would be hard to find test subjects willing to find out how much pre-ejaculate it takes to infect them. Rather than trying to guess whether or not you can manage to avoid chlamydia, or whether you have chlamydia, take this approach instead:
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.
Yes, if you think you had chlamydia at the time of your son's birth, you should ask the pediatrician to test him. Chlamydia in infants is often missed; it can present no obvious distress that would prompt specific testing for chlamydia, but can affect the child's health for years before someone thinks to check.
It would not be 'created' by simply wearing underwear more than one day. It is transmitted through sexual contact with someone that has it. You can't get chlamydia from reusing dirty underwear, even if you wore it before treatment. Chlamydia does not live for more than a few minutes outside your body.
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 can't get chlamydia from sharing a phone. It's spread only by sexual contact with someone who's infected. You get chlamydia from having oral, anal, or vaginal sex; genital-genital contact; sharing sex toys; or birth to a mother with chlamydia.
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.
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.
Chlamydia can only live outside the body for minutes. You can't get it from sharing a sponge.
The CDC notes that there is not good information about how contagious pharyngeal chlamydia is. It is theoretically possible to get chlamydia from kissing, but it would be highly unlikely. Nor can you get it from sitting in the same seat as them or hugging them. You get it from oral, anal, and vaginal sex; genital-genital contact; sharing sex toys; and from birth to an infected mother.
It would not be likely to get it in a lab.