You would lower your risk of complication from untreated chlamydia.
If your boyfriend has chlamydia and has not had it treated keep him well away from you because you will get it if you have sex with him. If he has seen a doctor and had it cleared up then you should have nothing to worry about. Chlamydia is a serious illness and if left untreated can lead to mayor problem in health and and cause irreparable damage to your reproductive system. It is easily treated but it has to be treated and avoided. If you are not sure at least make him wear a condom to give you some sort of protection.
Absolutely. There are effective and safe treatments, and it would be best for a pregnant woman to get treated before delivery. Please talk with your prenatal health care provider about this matter as soon as possible.
Blood does not transfer chlamydia, so you would not catch it.
Sickle cell may be treated by either a family doctor or if a specialist is needed it would be a Hematologist. hematologist only diagnose the condition from blood workups... see an internal medicine specialist...they are the ones trained to treat and follow up the condition
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, it would not prevent it, however, if they are being treated, they should discuss it with their physician to avoid problems with medication preventing clotting or similar issues.
The person is homozygous for the trait
You would act like a dog and people would think you were a dog and adopt you...
your balls would shrivel and no sperm would be produced
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.
Chlamydia can only live outside the body for minutes. You can't get it from sharing a sponge.
In the majority of recipients, the transfused red cells would function normally. Current FDA guidelines allow volunteer blood donations from Sickle trait (AS) donors. Red cell components selected for possible transfusion to sickle cell patients or neonates are screened for sickle trait prior to transfusion. If reactive, these components are not used for that patient.