Gonorrhea? What? My… Something's wrong with my thing?
How can you protect yourself from getting Gonorrhea?
Old Gonorrhea don't miss nothing.
You know she's got Gonorrhea, right?
How can I make sure I don't give anyone Gonorrhea?
In ancient Greece, for example, butterlac was used to treat Gonorrhea.
Immunomodulators(for example, pyrogenal, methyluracil) are most often prescribed for chronic Gonorrhea.
Ofloxacin is also used to treat
pelvic inflammatory disease and Chlamydia and/or Gonorrhea.
If left untreated, Gonorrhea can increase chances of getting or transmitting HIV.
The presence in the male body of latent infectious processes, chlamydia, Gonorrhea.
In that case, treatment includes antibiotics that kill both chlamydia and Gonorrhea.
Now there are two more cases of this so-called super Gonorrhea in Australia.
If untreated, Gonorrhea can increase a person's risk of acquiring or transmitting HIV.
Last year,
the Canadian province saw an 80 percent increase in cases of Gonorrhea.
For the first time the term"Gonorrhea" was used in the II century BC.
Other consequences of loose morals include herpes, Gonorrhea, hepatitis B and C, and syphilis.
Infections such as STDs(chlamydia, syphilis and Gonorrhea) lead to pelvic inflammatory disease or PID.
Even Gonorrhea, once easily cured, has become resistant to many of the older
traditional antibiotics.
When Gonorrhea is not treated,
this can increase the individual's risk of getting or transmitting HIV.
 Common diseases that may cause these abnormalities are thrush, forgotten tampons,
bacterial vaginosis, and Gonorrhea.
Burning and pain during urination can also
be observed with such a common venereal disease as Gonorrhea.
It is believed that this lie arose
in the 16th century Europe, when syphilis and Gonorrhea spread.
Antibiotics that treat Gonorrhea may be failing,
but there's still a way to fight back: practice safe sex.
HIV, AIDS, Gonorrhea, herpes, hepatitis C-
These are some of the diseases that spread due to unprotected sex.
Not necessarily: Researchers recently discovered a new strain of Gonorrhea, H014, that can't be killed with current antibiotics.
This is because the cost of treating Gonorrhea is less than the cost of testing for the infection.
A new report published in Emerging Infectious Diseases shows that the
threat of severe, antibiotic-resistant Gonorrhea is looming closer.
Researchers believe that cephalsporins,
the current form antibiotics used to treat Gonorrhea, are becoming less effective at treating the STD.
Data collected from nearly 80 countries
shows that antibiotic resistance is making Gonorrhea much tougher, and at times impossible, to treat.
Gonorrhea in men, whose treatment is quite long,
is present in the body until the gonococcus in the secretions disappears completely.