|
SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED DISEASES - STD
SYMPTOMS
CHLAMYDIA:
Chlamydia affects women and men. Most women and some men have no symptoms.
Symptoms show up 7-28 days after having sex.
- WOMEN:
- Discharge from the vagina
- Bleeding from the vagina between
periods
- Burning or pain when you urinate
(pee)
- Pain in abdomen, sometimes with
fever and nausea
- MEN:
- Watery, white drip from the penis
- Burning or pain when you urinate
- Need to urinate (pee) more often
- Swollen or tender testicle
*If not treated: you can give chlamydia to
your sexual partner(s); it can lead to more serious infection;
reproductive organs can be damaged; women, and possibly men, may no
longer be able to have children; and a mother can give it to her baby
during childbirth.
GENITAL WARTS (HPV):
Symptoms show up 1-8 months after contact with HPV, the virus that causes
genital warts. Symptoms may be small, bumpy warts on the sex organs and
anus or itching or burning around the sex organs. After warts go away, the
virus sometimes stays in the body, and the warts can come back.
*If not treated, you can give genital
warts to your sexual partner(s). Warts may go away without treatment,
remain unchanged, or grow and spread. A mother with warts can give them
to her baby during childbirth.
GONORRHEA:
Symptoms show up 0-21 days after having sex. Most women and men have NO
symptoms.
- WOMEN:
- Thick yellow or white discharge from
the vagina
- Burning or pain when you urinate
(pee) or have a bowel movement
- Abnormal periods of bleeding between
periods
- MEN:
- Thick yellow or white drip from the
penis
- Burning or pain when you urinate or
have a bowel movement
- Need to urinate (pee) more often
*If not treated, you can give gonorrhea
to your sexual partner(s). It can lead to more serious infections.
Reproductive organs can be damaged. Both men and women may no longer be
able to have children. A mother can give it to her baby during
childbirth, and can cause heart trouble, skin disease, arthritis and
blindness.
HEPATITIS B:
Symptoms show up 1-9 months after contact with the Hepatitis B virus. Many
people have no symptoms or mild symptoms. Others may have flu-like
feelings that don't go away, tiredness, jaundice (yellow skin), dark
urine, or light-colored bowel movements.
*If not treated, you can give Hepatitis
B to your sexual partner(s) or someone you share a needle with. Some
people recover completely. Some people cannot be cured. Symptoms may go
away, but they can still give Hepatitis B to others. It can cause
permanent liver damage, and a mother can give it to her baby during
childbirth.
HERPES:
Symptoms show up 1-30 days or longer after having sex. Some people have no
symptoms. Some people may have flu-like symptoms, small, painful blisters
on the sex organs or mouth, or itching or burning before the blisters
appear. Blisters last 1-3 weeks. Blisters go away, but you still have
herpes. Blisters can come back.
*You can give Herpes to your sexual
partner(s). Herpes cannot be cured. A mother with herpes can give it to
her baby during childbirth.
HIV/AIDS:
Visit the HIV/AIDS site for more
information.
SYPHILIS:
1st stage (Primary Syphilis) - a person reaches the first stage of
syphilis 10-90 days after contact with an infected person, average 3
weeks. A painless, reddish-brown sore or sores appear usually on the
mouth, sex organs, breasts or fingers. Sore lasts 1-5 weeks, average 3
weeks, and goes away even without treatment. Without treatment, you still
have syphilis. Syphilis can be given to your sex partner(s) during this
time.
- 2nd stage (Secondary Syphilis) -
Symptoms show up from 0-10 weeks, average 4 weeks, after the primary
sore heals. Symptoms last 2-6 weeks, average 4 weeks. Symptoms vary from
person to person, but generally include one or more of the following:
generalized body rash, hair loss, spots on the hands and feet, sores on
the face or body, moist wart-like growths in the vaginal area, flu-like
symptoms. Symptoms will go away without treatment, but without
treatment, you still have syphilis. Syphilis can be given to your sex
partner(s) during this time.
- Early Latent Syphilis- When a person
has had syphilis for less than a year, does not have symptoms, and has
not been treated.
- Late Latent Syphilis- When a person
has had untreated syphilis for more than a year
* If not treated, a mother can give
syphilis to her baby during pregnancy or have a miscarriage. Syphilis
can cause heart disease, brain damage, blindness, and death.
|