What is gonorrhea?
Gonorrhea is
an infection spread through sexual contact. In men, it most often infects the
urethra. In women, it usually infects the urethra,
cervix, or both. It also can infect the rectum, anus,
throat, and pelvic organs. In rare cases, it can infect the eyes.
Gonorrhea does not cause problems if you treat it right away. But if it's
left untreated, it can lead to serious problems.
For a woman, untreated gonorrhea can move
into the uterus, fallopian tubes, and ovaries
. This can cause
painful scar tissue and inflammation, known as
pelvic inflammatory disease (PID). PID can cause
infertility or
ectopic pregnancy.
Sometimes gonorrhea is called the clap, drip, or
GC.
What causes gonorrhea?
A certain kind of bacteria
causes gonorrhea. Gonorrhea is a
sexually transmitted infection, or STI. This means it
can spread from one partner to another during vaginal, anal, or oral
sex.
A woman who is pregnant can pass the infection to her newborn
during delivery.
What are the symptoms?
Many people have no
symptoms, so they can pass gonorrhea to their sex partners without knowing
it.
If there are symptoms, they may include:
- Pain when you urinate.
- Abnormal discharge from the penis or
vagina.
Gonorrhea infection in the throat also usually does not
cause symptoms.
Symptoms in men usually are easier to notice than
symptoms in women. But some men have mild or no symptoms.
In women,
the early symptoms may be so mild that they are mistaken for a
bladder infection or a vaginal infection. When an
untreated infection moves into a woman's pelvic organs, symptoms can include
lower belly pain, pain during sex, vaginal bleeding, and a fever.
The time from exposure to gonorrhea until symptoms begin usually is 2 to
5 days. But it may take as long as 30 days before symptoms start.
You can spread gonorrhea even if you don't have symptoms. You are
contagious until you have been treated.
How is gonorrhea diagnosed?
Your doctor will ask
you questions about your past health and your sexual history, such as how many
partners you have. Your doctor may also do a physical exam to look for signs of
infection.
Urine or fluid from the infected area will be tested for
gonorrhea. You may also be tested for other sexually transmitted infections
(STIs) at the same time.
As soon as you find out you have
gonorrhea, be sure to let your sex partners know. Experts recommend that you
notify everyone you've had sex with in the past 60 days. If you have not had
sex in the past 60 days, contact the last person you had sex with.
How is it treated?
Antibiotics are
used to treat gonorrhea. It's important to take all of the medicine as
directed. Otherwise the medicine may not work. Both sex partners need treatment
to keep from passing the infection back and forth.
Getting
treatment as soon as possible helps prevent the spread of the infection and
lowers your risk for other problems, such as pelvic inflammatory
disease.
Many people who have gonorrhea also have
chlamydia, another STI. If you have gonorrhea and
chlamydia, you will get medicine that treats both infections.
Avoid
all sexual contact while you are being treated for an STI. If your treatment is
a single dose of medicine, you should not have any sexual contact for 7 days
after treatment so the medicine will have time to work.
Having a
gonorrhea infection that was cured does not protect you from getting it again.
If you are treated and your sex partner is not, you probably will get it
again.
Finding out that you have an STI may make you feel bad about
yourself or about sex. Counseling or a support group may help you feel
better.
How can you prevent gonorrhea?
It's easier to
prevent an STI like gonorrhea than it is to treat it.
- Use a condom every time you have sex. Latex
and polyurethane condoms keep out the viruses and bacteria that cause
STIs.
- Don't have more than one sex partner at a time. The safest
sex is with one partner who has sex only with you. Every time you add a new sex
partner, you are being exposed to all of the diseases that all of that person's
partners may have.
- Be responsible. Don't have sex if you have
symptoms of an infection or if you are being treated for an
STI.
- Wait to have sex with a new partner until both of you have
been tested for STIs.
Frequently Asked Questions
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