Chlamydia is the most sexually transmitted infection mid women and can be treated with antibiotics.
A newly performed urine check up on for chlamydia in men identified 84% of infections, according to a journal of 1,200 men published in the British Medical Album, Reuters reports. Chlamydia is the most sexually transmitted infection mid women and can be treated certainly with antibiotics. Be that as it may, the STI often goes undiagnosed and causes no symptoms in 70% of cases. It can direct to pelvic incendiary
disease, ectopic pregnancy and infertility. It also can take round the goods a come after women more vulnerable to HIV. Explicit tests for chlamydia in men often comprise been inconclusive and uncomfortable, involving a proposal swab of the urethra. The developer of the new check up on, Helen Lee of the University of Cambridge, said, "This has led to assorted cases of infection in men's health blooming undiagnosed and being transmitted to their female partners, with potentially more unsafe complications." The new check is "both accurate and swift, allowing men attending the clinics to be tested and treated on whiteheads in one visit," according to Lee. She said that the test already is approved in France and in the parsimonious future will be available in Italy, Spain, Portugal and other European countries (Reuters, 7/28).