How long does it take for an STD to show up?
Have had a history of unclean sexual intercourse, or have sexually transmitted diseases If you find that you have urinary or genital discomfort or general discomfort, or have various skin lesions in the genital area, you will easily suspect whether you have a sexually transmitted disease. This worry is not unreasonable, and you should go to a doctor for treatment. Even if you don't feel any discomfort, as long as you have a suspicious medical history, you can regularly see a doctor for corresponding examinations.
How long does it usually take for an STD to show up after contracting it?
Like gonorrhea, genital herpes, syphilis, and pubic lice, etc. male How long does it take for sexually transmitted diseases to occur? Different diseases have different incubation periods and different onset times. It usually ranges from one week to two months. Regarding the issue of STDs, let’s take a look at how long the onset of various STDs (in other words, the incubation period of STDs) is.
1. The onset time of genital warts: generally 1 to 8 months, with an average of 3 months;
2. The onset time of syphilis: first stage: 2 to 4 weeks, second stage: 8 to 10 weeks, third stage: 2 to more than 2 years;
The early symptoms of male syphilis are not obvious. Therefore, it is not easy for us to detect the early symptoms of male syphilis. This requires us to fully understand the early symptoms of male syphilis so that we can detect the early symptoms of male syphilis in time.
Chancre appears 7 to 60 days after infection with syphilis. In most patients, chancre is a single, painless, itchy, round or oval ulcer with clear borders, which is higher than the skin surface. The sore surface is relatively clean. Those with secondary infections have more secretions. It has a cartilage-like hardness to the touch. It lasts 4 to 6 weeks and can heal on its own. Chancre can coexist with secondary syphilis and must be accompanied by chancre and genital herpes.
3. The onset time of gonorrhea: acute gonorrhea: 2 to 7 days, chronic gonorrhea about 2 weeks;
4. Non-gonococcal urethritis: 7 to 21 days to several months;
5. Genital herpes: 4 to 5 days, the longest onset time is 26 weeks.
6. Symptoms such as itching will begin to occur 2-3 weeks after being infected with pubic lice. The itching of pubic lice is intermittent, which is also a common symptom of pubic lice in men.
To find a doctor, you should go to a regular hospital Hospital Or specialized hospitals, the diagnosis of sexually transmitted diseases must be based on scientific basis, and informal private clinics should be avoided to avoid being caught in the psychology of seeking medical treatment and passively accepting various expensive treatments, without obtaining satisfactory diagnosis and treatment. Some patients are worried that their privacy cannot be guaranteed. In fact, the hospital has clear regulations that doctors are obliged to keep patients confidential and respect their privacy rights.
Suggestion: Patients should not just listen to what the doctor says when seeing a doctor clinical For diagnosis, it is best to do some relevant tests, because no matter how experienced the specialist is, misdiagnosis or missed diagnosis may occur, and medicine is an evolving science, and testing methods are constantly being updated. Nowadays, there are many hospitals contracted by private parties that specialize in treating sexually transmitted diseases, and some of them have various brands and are covered with legal cloaks. In this case, it is difficult for patients to distinguish them. It is recommended that if patients have doubts about the diagnosis of certain hospitals, they can consider changing the hospital and doing the same examination again to see if the results are consistent.
Do I need to avoid food after contracting an STD? What foods are good for recovery from sexually transmitted diseases? This is something every STD patient would like to know. Simply put, STDs are contagious disease , it is not an allergic or immune disease, and there are no special taboos. Like syphilis, there are no special dietary taboos ; However, like gonorrhea and non-gonococcal urethritis, due to symptoms of bladder and urethra irritation, it is not advisable to drink alcohol or eat spicy food. For example, the symptoms can be aggravated after drinking alcohol or eating spicy food.
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