Yes, when you are getting treated you can still transmit chlamydia. Patients being treated should avoid oral, anal, and vaginal intercourse (even with a condom) until seven days after single-dose treatment, or until seven-day treatment is complete.
Yes, you can get chlamydia during the incubation period. It's transferable before you have symptoms.
Yes, the infection comes first, then the incubation period, then the symptoms (if present), just as with any infectious disease.
Yes you certainly can.
Yes you can give your partner chlamydia.
Antibiotics can cure chlamydia even before a person has symptoms. Early treatment can reduce some of the risks of chlamydia.
You can transmit chlamydia before a test will detect it.
No, acidophilus can not cure chlamydia.
No; vitamins will not cure chlamydia.
Esomeprazole is not an antibiotic, and it does not cure chlamydia.
Diphenhydramine is an antihistamine. It is not an antibiotic. It will not cure chlamydia.
Mefloquine is an antiprotozoal, and does not treat bacterial infections. It will not cure chlamydia.
No, red wine does not cure chlamydia. You need antibiotics for that.
Antihistamines and acetaminophen will not cure chlamydia. You need antibiotics.
Metoclopramide is an anti-nausea medication, not an antibiotic. It will not cure chlamydia.
Kenacort is a steroid, not an antibiotic. Steroids do not cure infection. A kenacort injection will not cure a chlamydia infection.
Naproxen is an anti-inflammatory pain reliever, not an antibiotic. It does not cure chlamydia.
No, there was not always a cure for chlamydia. Antibiotics only became available in the 20th century.
Ornidazole will not be effective at curing chlamydia.