T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1001.1 | Chlamydia: the 'invisble' STD | TLE::D_CARROLL | We too are one | Thu Mar 01 1990 13:19 | 23 |
| The name of the disease is Chlamydia.
Chlamadyia is very dangerous because it is often symptomless, especially
in men. They can carry it for a long time and not know about it. Also the
test for it is expensive and more difficult than for (some) other problems.
Chlamydia can cause Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID), sterility, pelvic
infections, and a higher chance of an ectopian pregnancy. In men, if they
have symptoms, it will look similar to gonorrhea.
(the above is from my Human Sexuality book)
Remembering what the instructor said, Chlamydia is a very common STD (the most
common among college students.) A man can go a long time carrying it without
realizing it. I don't know *how* long, but it doesn't seem all that unlikely
that the man could have been carrying it from before he was married, depending
on how long they have been married. Also, she could have had it for a while
without knowing.
The book does not mention that there is any *other* way of getting Chlamydia
than through sexual contact.
D!
|
1001.2 | Have her relax. Somewhat. | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Thu Mar 01 1990 13:20 | 9 |
| Deb,
Believe the nurse. Chlomidea (or however it's spelled) shows
no symptoms in men, and men aren't even tested for it until a
female partner is diagnosed with it. I think (I'm not sure, mind)
that it is antibiotic-resistant too, so it can survive even if
its host is flooded with antibiotics for other diseases.
Ann B.
|
1001.3 | | DYO780::AXTELL | Dragon Lady | Thu Mar 01 1990 13:25 | 8 |
| My mother had it last year. She's 75 and hasn't been anywhere
near a sexual partner since dear old Dad left (20+ years ago).
Since she's the world's most incredible prude, there must be
either one heck of an incubation period or another method of
transmission.
-maureen
|
1001.4 | | SSDEVO::GALLUP | go ahead...make my day! | Thu Mar 01 1990 16:07 | 27 |
|
Relax. It's cureable with treatment.
I've exhibited symptoms for years.....however, ever test I've
taken has come back negative, so they're sure it's just some
weird yeast infection.
When I last had my series of tests (3 years ago, I guess). I
was told that 2 out of 5 tests give false negatives or false
positives. I don't know if the tests have changed any, but
that is something to think about.
Yes, it can lay dormant for years........in fact, some people
might be carriers and never get the symptoms. Suggest to her
that her husband get checked IMMEDIATELY. There is no
telling whether she was the original carrier or he (unless of
course, one of them only has ever had one sexual
partner...then it's pretty obvious).
But it's not rare...in fact, it's the most common STD I
believe there is......and it's treatable/cureable.
kath
|
1001.5 | ask for it by name | DECWET::JWHITE | keep on rockin', girl | Thu Mar 01 1990 17:07 | 14 |
|
according to the planned parenthood training session i was at
a couple of months ago, chlamydia is indeed very common and
treatable. however, for women it is particularly dangerous
since in the long run it can lead to serious damage to the
uterus, et al. and to sterility. some doctors are theorizing
that the apparent increase in sterility is chlamydia related.
it is true that men are not usually tested for it unless their
female partner has tested positive for it, at least partly
because the test for men is very involved and painful (i leave
it to the reader to guess what may be involved %^) and the
test for women can (and probably should) be done along with
a pap.
|
1001.6 | | AKOV12::GIUNTA | | Fri Mar 02 1990 11:06 | 17 |
| I had chlamydia which was diagnosed once I started treatments for
infertility. They actually found it when my husband noticed some
symptoms, and that's what he had. It was then that they checked me.
It turns out that I most likely had the infection lying dormant for
quite some time, and we figure that he had to give it to me from one of
his girlfriends a long time ago since my husband is the only person I
have had relations with. That means that I had to have this for about
6 years before it flared up. It turns out that the test to check for
clear tubes has been known to aggravate chlamydia if it is present, and
they believe that that is what changed the infection from dormant to
active. We both had to take some oral medication to clear up the
infection.
Tell your sister not to assume that her husband is cheating just
because of this infection. It is very possible that it has been lying
dormant for quite some time, and is just now flaring up.
|
1001.7 | Not dormant, not benign | TLE::D_CARROLL | Turn and face the strange changes | Fri Mar 02 1990 12:08 | 20 |
| nit (which really isn't so minor):
As I understand it (as I say, from Sex Ed class) it doesn't "lie dormant", it
"reamins symptomless". The difference is that if it is *dormant*, it isn't
doing any damage. Sort of in remission. But with Chlamydia, that isn't true,
and is a dangerous perception. Because while it might not show any symptoms
that your average person would notice enough to go to a doctor, it can be
doing real damage to your body. (As previously mentioned, it can cause
infection, PID and infertility...) "Dormancy" gives to feeling that it is
benign, which it is not.
Have hope, though, my book says a weeks on anitbiotics is usually sufficient
to treat it.
(Kath, if you are showing symptoms of Chlamydia, I would recomment getting
retested...last time I was tested the Doc told me a new test had been
developed recently that was more accurate - perhaps since after your last
test?)
D!
|
1001.8 | y | DASXPS::COMPANION | | Fri Mar 02 1990 12:51 | 9 |
|
Thanks for all the info. As soon as I started to get responses
from this note yesterday, I told my sister to put her suspicions
on hold until I send her all these replies. I'll send them this
afternoon. Thanks I'm sure it will put her mind at ease and in
all likelihood "save a marriage".
Debbie
|
1001.9 | | ASDS::RSMITH | | Fri Mar 02 1990 15:05 | 14 |
|
A friend of mine had Chlamydia and she took some antibiotics and is
fine now. One idea for your sister. It sounds like chlamydia can lie
symptomless for years. However, it can also flare up right away. My
girlfriend got it a couple of weeks after sexual contact with an
infected male. So, what I'm trying to say is, yes assume the best, but
perhaps she should ask her husband about his loyalty. I'm just saying
this because if he is cheating on her and contracting a sexual disease,
then she is in a dangerous position. It's a good idea to trust your
husband, but the Russian idea of "trust but verify" is a safer one.
(I think that's on of Gorby's mottos) She could even word it like, "I
know chlamydia can be symptomless for years, but I have to ask this:
have you been with another woman since we were married?"
|
1001.10 | co-mod reply | ULTRA::ZURKO | We're more paranoid than you are. | Tue Mar 06 1990 12:32 | 5 |
| Please share the information in the replies without naming any names, or get
permission from any author if there's a reply you wish to extract whole-sale.
This is pretty much standard notes policy.
Mez
|
1001.11 | New Test | SMAUG::RITZ | Tangled up in Big Blue | Mon Mar 19 1990 14:12 | 9 |
| I can verify what D! said in .7 - there is a new test, so new that many health
providers don't know about it. I can also say that the test for men is not
painful in the least (or the MD I went to was extremely skillful...)
As someone else said, misdiagnosis of Chlamydia is common. If you have
recurrent UTIs or any of the symptoms, do get tested. If they tell you the test
is expensive and/or painful, go elsewhere, as it is neither.
John
|
1001.13 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | if you are a dreamer, come in.. | Mon Mar 19 1990 15:00 | 1 |
| urinary tract infections
|