Article

How to Detect and Prevent Chlamydia?

Topic: Health EducationPublished March 31, 2022

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Speaking of Chlamydia, we may feel strange, but as a bacterium widely parasitic in humans, mammals, and birds, it significantly impacts our health. So what is Chlamydia? What are the dangers of Chlamydia? How can we detect and prevent it? Chlamydia, a Gram-negative pathogen, is a prokaryotic microorganism that can pass through bacterial filters, parasitize in cells, and have a unique developmental cycle. In the past, it was considered to be a virus, but now it belongs to the category of bacteria. Chlamydia infection can induce type-specific cellular and humoral immunity. However, the protection is not strong and is short-lived, so chlamydia infection often manifests as persistent infection, repeated infection, or invisible infection. Some Chlamydia antigens can cause immunopathological damage after injection into human skin. There are so many hazards of Chlamydia. How can we detect Chlamydia? It is not easy to tell if you are infected with Chlamydia since symptoms are not always apparent. But when they do occur, they are usually noticeable within one to three weeks of contact and can include the following: When women experience chlamydia infection, increased leucorrhea and abnormal leucorrhea are the most common symptoms. Generally, there may be yellow-green leucorrhea, and there will also be genital itching. Some women will also have purulent leucorrhea and may also have ulcers at the vulvovaginal opening. The symptoms of chlamydia infection in men are usually manifestations of urethritis, one of the primary pathogens of non-gonococcal urethritis. Most men do not feel symptoms when they are infected in the early stage, and symptoms often appear when the patient's immunity is weakened. It is manifested as urethral itching and discomfort. Some people will feel a urethral burning sensation or painful urination when urinating, and it will also be accompanied by the appearance of urethral secretions, which can be severe or purulent, primarily yellow. It may be accompanied by a peculiar smell. There are a few different tests your doctor can use to diagnose Chlamydia. They will probably use a swab to take a sample from the urethra in men or the cervix in women and then send the specimen to a laboratory to be analyzed. Other tests check a urine sample for the presence of the bacteria. How to treat Chlamydia? If you have Chlamydia, your doctor will prescribe oral antibiotics, usually azithromycin (Zithromax) or doxycycline. Your doctor will also recommend your partner(s) be treated to prevent reinfection and further spread of the disease. The infection should clear up with a treatment in about a week or two. Finishing all of your antibiotics is essential even if you feel better. People with severe chlamydia infection may require hospitalization, intravenous antibiotics (medicine given through a vein), and pain medicine. Alos, when chlamydia come back after antibiotics, herbal medicine Diuretic and Anti-inflammatory Pill for men and Fuyan Pill for women can be used since they can sterilize continuously. And they will not cause drug resistance with long-term usage. After taking medicine, people should be re-tested to ensure the infection is cured. This is particularly important if you are unsure that your partner(s) obtained treatment. Do not have sex until you are sure you and your partner no longer have the disease. In short, if people focus on daily hygiene, adopt safe sex, learn more about Chlamydia, and understand its mechanism of action and harm, then defeating it can be achieved. They can do this: 1. Take exercise. If people can take active physical exercise to enhance the body's resistance, they can reduce the infection and the typical parasitic organisms in the body onset. 2. Pay attention to hygiene to avoid cross-infection. Develop good hygiene habits and pay attention to infections such as unclean sexual intercourse. 3. Vaccination. It can be prevented to a certain extent with attenuated virus vaccines, with a protection rate of only 50%, but it has not yet become widespread.

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