If neither partner has chlamydia, that won't cause chlamydia. But it can move bacteria from the rectal area -- bacteria that are normal and healthy to have in that area -- to the vaginal area. Those bacteria can sometimes cause problems in the vagina. So it's best to use a condom and then change condoms before having vaginal sex.
Chlamydia can be transmitted during vaginal, anal, or oral sex. Chlamydia can also be passed from an infected mother to her baby during vaginal childbirth.
A wisdom tooth erupting will not protect you from chlamydia. Chlamydia is spread by oral, anal, and vaginal sex.
You can't get chlamydia that way. Chlamydia is transmitted by oral, anal or vaginal sex; by genital-genital contact; or from an infected woman to her child during vaginal birth.
You can't get chlamydia that way. Chlamydia is transmitted by oral, anal or vaginal sex; by genital-genital contact; or from an infected woman to her child during vaginal birth.
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.
You can't get chlamydia that way. Chlamydia is transmitted by oral, anal or vaginal sex; by genital-genital contact; or from an infected woman to her child during vaginal birth. It can only live for a few minutes outside your body.
Chlamydia can damage the body, but the germ is gone after effective treatment is completed. Patients being treated should avoid oral, anal, and vaginal intercourse until 1-2 weeks have passed since treatment was completed.
You can get chlamydia from oral, anal, or vaginal sex; from sharing sex toys; or from genital-genital contact. In addition, a baby can get chlamydia during birth to a woman who is infected. If none of these applies to you, you won't get chlamydia.
You can't get chlamydia from talking to someone. You can get chlamydia from oral, anal, or vaginal sex; genital-genital contact; sharing sex toys; or birth to an infected mother.
You can't get chlamydia from wearing tight clothing. You get chlamydia from having oral, anal, or vaginal sex with someone who's infected, from genital-genital contact with an infected person, or by being born to a woman with chlamydia. Generally the discomfort one feels from wearing tight pants is simple irritation and will clear up once you stop wearing pants that are too tight.
No, you can't. There is no other infection that turns into chlamydia. You get chlamydia from oral, anal, or vaginal sex; genital-genital contact; sharing sex toys; and birth to an infected mother.
Bread doesn't cause chlamydia. It's spread by oral, anal, and vaginal sex; genital-genital contact; sharing sex toys; or birth to a woman with chlamydia.