Most people with chlamydia are fertile after treatment. However, if you were infertile before, treatment is not likely to change that. The exception is that a few men infected with chlamydia in the testicles have a decrease in sperm count and quality that gradually improves after treatment.
No; you can be less fertile.
Chlamydia is not a fungus, and can't be cured with a fungistatic medication.
No you do not.
yes it can be.
Yes, it can be cured by a doctor.
All patients with chlamydia can be cured with antibiotics. Effective treatment will eliminate the bacteria, although any resulting damage will not be reversed with antibiotics.
Yes, having chlamydia once can harm you, but most people are cured of chlamydia without long-term effects.
No, you can not catch chlamydia from someone that is not infected. You can only get chlamydia by having intimate contact with someone who has chlamydia. If you and your partner don't have it, you can't catch it from each other.
If the infection is cured, there is no risk to having a baby.
Chlamydia is bacterial, and, like so many bacterial illnesses, it can be cured with antibiotics.
No, there is no need for an injection of any kind to cure chlamydia. It can be cured with a single dose of antibiotics in pill form.
To date, there have been no reports of resistance to azithromycin in chlamydia. The CDC believes there is no need for repeat testing to ensure that azithromycin cured the infection.
Yes, a person contract chlamydia in two days.