News0 min ago
She's a gonner 'ere.
29 Answers
Gonorrhea, clap, VD, whatever you want to call it, can hardly lie 'dormant' in a person for over 3 years without any symptoms surely? An acquaintance of mine swears she has not been unfaithful to her partner of 3 years' standing, but recently had vaginal symptoms - went to the GU clinic and was diagnosed with gonorrhoea. She is insisting she must have caught this from a previous partner and it has lain dormant for all this time, only to rear its ugly head now. She insists her present partner has not given it to her.
I find this a little hard to believe - I know that up to 40% to 50% of women don't get symptoms, but why would they suddenly flare up after 3 years?
I find this a little hard to believe - I know that up to 40% to 50% of women don't get symptoms, but why would they suddenly flare up after 3 years?
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I've been googling around and it seems it doesn't really lie dormant like syphilis but may show only very mild symptoms that nobody notices - though that amounts to much the same thing. Three years seems to be an unusually long time, though.
How does she know she hasn't got it from her current partner?
ummmm, no, the correct spelling is 'dormouse'.
How does she know she hasn't got it from her current partner?
ummmm, no, the correct spelling is 'dormouse'.
craft - as if ..!
Not really - it just made me wonder if that were possible, and so I googled it this morning to see if it is possible if not probable.
fluff - I finish all medications today, so countdown to op on Friday. I don't think I'll be in work right up until Thursday though, because suddenly stopping my meds is, i just know for a fact, going to make me feel really weird. I anticipate being in tomorrow (suppose I'm in the right place here at the surgery if I faint or something....?!!) but beyond that I don't really know. When I get the runs of SVT, tachycardia and the near-syncopes I'm not really safe to drive.
Not really - it just made me wonder if that were possible, and so I googled it this morning to see if it is possible if not probable.
fluff - I finish all medications today, so countdown to op on Friday. I don't think I'll be in work right up until Thursday though, because suddenly stopping my meds is, i just know for a fact, going to make me feel really weird. I anticipate being in tomorrow (suppose I'm in the right place here at the surgery if I faint or something....?!!) but beyond that I don't really know. When I get the runs of SVT, tachycardia and the near-syncopes I'm not really safe to drive.
I was a bit agog (good word!) actually Boo - like I said, I wouldn't really call her a friend - more a friend of a friend. I think what it is, people know I have worked in the NHS in hospitals, surgeries and sexual health clinics for the last 21 years so they tell me all sorts. They assume I'm unshockable (almost true) and have an answer for everything(not everything.... or else I'd be claiming doctors' wages...)
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