The types of medication that treat ear infections may also clear chlamydia. It is possible that you both had it, but his test was negative due to the treatment for ear infection.
Not very likely for this to occur.
No; it is not possible to get chlamydia from recurring UTI and Candida infections. You were exposed to the bacteria from a sexual partner.
If you are in a monogamous relationship, having sexual intercourse during pregnancy is not harmful. In fact, there are many views that intercourse during to and leading up to days before birth can actually be beneficial. The presence of sperm would have no bearing, provided your partner maintains a monogamous relationship and remains devoid of any communicable disease such as chlamydia, gonorrhoea, HIV, etc.
Mefloquine is an antiprotozoal, and does not treat bacterial infections. It will not cure chlamydia.
There are three possible answers:you had it before the long term relationship, oryou caught it from your partner, orit's a false positive test result
Yes, you can get chlamydia at any time. Well, any time you have unprotected sex with an infected person. It's not like chlamydia just walks down the street and jumps on innocent, unsuspecting victims.
You don't always get pregnant after having sex that first time and it doesn't happen when you want it. if you've had Chlamydia for a long period of time before you got the medicine the Chlamydia can also have made you sterile. Sadly, that is one of the side effects. And you two should not have unprotected sex while undergoing treatment.
No, they're different infections from different germs.
Chlamydia infections occur in both men and women, and infected people of both genders can pass the infection to partners.
Vancomycin is not used for chlamydia. There are a myriad of cheaper and easier alternatives, and vancomycin must be reserved for other serious infections.
Chlamydia will stay in a baby until treated. Children with lung infections may remain undiagnosed for years.
The test for Chlamydia is a vaginal swab, is this the test you are talking about? It is probably a good idea to go back to your doctors.