One myth about chlamydia is that you would know if you had it. Most diagnosed patients had no symptoms.
Another myth is that you have to sleep around to get it. One partner is plenty.
Mucus is produced in many location, some that may and some that may not be infected with chlamydia. You can get chlamydia from semen, pre-ejaculate, and vaginal fluid.
Some mistook chlamydia for a virus because it's an obligate intracellular parasite.
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Uncomplicated chlamydia will not cause a bad back, although there appears to be some connection between chlamydia infection (both sexually transmitted Chlamydia trachomatis and non-STD Chlamydia pneumonia) and ankylosing spondylitis. Chlamydia may make you feel ill.
Some chlamydia treatments can be dissolved. Talk to your pharmacist about options. There is a 1g azithromycin powder treatment for chlamydia meant to be mixed with liquid.
Myths were created as an oral tradition. Some myths started out as revaluations or dreams some were even true stories, then they morphed into some grandiose story.
Chlamydia trachomatis is the scientific name for the bacteria that causes chlamydia.
myths are a characteristics of not real or a tale or fiction
"Chlamydia probe" is a name for a chlamydia swab.
There are some home tests available, and there are services that allow you to go directly to a lab for chlamydia testing for a significant fee. There is no test for chlamydia that you can do with common household items.
There are three major types of Chlamydia: Chlamydia psittaci, Chlamydia pneumoniae, and Chlamydia trachomatis. Each of these has the potential to cause a type of pneumonia.
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