If you touch an infected persons clothes with a good amount of recent body fluids on them (blood, genital secretions, pus, etc) AND you do not immediately wash your hands ANDif you have a recent cut OR you touch your own mucous membranes, then, yes, it is possible to get STD's through clothes.
If both people are FULLY clothed and never have skin-to-skin genital contact, the chances of contracting a genital STD is slim to none.
It is also more likely to contract an STD (orally) if you perform oral sex on an infected male. Some common oral STDs are: oral thrush caused by yeast; herpes; HIV/AIDs if you have broken skin around the lips or inside your mouth.
It is possible from sharing clothes with an infected person to pick up several types of STI or STD.
One such example is Trichomoniasis which is a type of parasite that can survive in warm damp environments such as damp clothing. Another example is genital lice which are small parasites that can survive in clothing, bedding, etc.
Chlamydia can't live for more than a few minutes outside your body. Washing your clothes regularly is a good health practice, but you can't reinfect yourself with chlamydia by wearing unwashed clothes that you wore before treatment.
You can't get chlamydia that way unless you're rubbing genitals together without clothes on. Chlamydia is caused by bacteria spread by oral, anal, or vaginal sex; genital-genital contact; sharing sex toys; or birth to an infected woman.
Chlamydia reproduces through binary fission.
The chlamydia infection spread through birds is not the same as chlamydia spread by sex. They are caused by different bacteria.
No, you can't get chlamydia due to the way you dress. Chlamydia is spread by oral, anal, and vaginal sex; genital-genital contact; and birth to an infected woman.
Vaseline won't protect you from chlamydia. You can't get chlamydia from sharing a jar of Vaseline with someone, though.
It is theoretically possible to transfer chlamydia by mouth to vagina, but it is believed that chlamydia is rarely transmitted to females through oral sex. The reason is that chlamydia does not infect the mouth, but only the throat. It is possible for a male to get chlamydia from oral sex, but cunnilingus and anilingus do not appear to be high-risk activities for transmitting chlamydia.
Chlamydia spreads to mucous membranes. It is not spread from blood to blood, so you can't get infected through a cut.
Chlamydia can not come back through stress, nor is it passed on via a needle.
No. Chlamydia is a sexually transmitted infection (STI) which is transmitted through through vaginal, anal or oral sex.
Sex. It is an STD.
The portals of exit for chlamydia are the urethra, vagina, and rectum.