Chlamydia Diagnosis

Chlamydia Diagnosis

Chlamydia is not always diagnosed promptly because so many people who are infected have no symptoms and may not go to a doctor. In May 2007, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) recommended annual screening for chlamydia of all sexually active women age 25 and younger, as well as other women at high risk for infection who do not have symptoms. In addition, many people who do have symptoms of chlamydia are also infected with HIV, gonorrhea, syphilis, or other STDs. It is now common for doctors to test patients for these other dis- eases to determine which disease is causing the patient’s symptoms.

Chlamydia can be diagnosed in both men and women by a simple urine test. Another test that can be used is a laboratory culture of a smear taken from a woman’s cervix (the lower end of the uterus), the opening of the urethra at the tip of a man’s penis, or the anus.

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