Infection with gonorrhoea is increasing in the UK. We look at the best ways to prevent infection, common symptoms and treatment.
Dr Rob Hicks last medically reviewed this article in April 2008
Infection with gonorrhoea is increasing in the UK. We look at the best ways to prevent infection, common symptoms and treatment.
Dr Rob Hicks last medically reviewed this article in April 2008
Gonorrhoea is a sexually transmitted bacterial infection and both men and women can become infected.
It's possible to have gonorrhoea and not have any symptoms. When symptoms do occur, men are more likely to notice them than women.
The symptoms depend on the site of the infection, as gonorrhoea can infect the cervix, urethra, rectum, anus, throat and eyes.
Men may experience:
Women may experience:
Left untreated, gonorrhoea can cause pelvic inflammatory disease in women, inflammation of the testicles and prostate gland in men, and eye infections in babies if it's passed on during birth.
Practising safer sex reduces the risk of infection with gonorrhoea. Testing and treating (if appropriate) all sexual contacts helps to prevent the infection being passed on to others.
The infections can be treated effectively with antibiotics.
You can find a clinic to help with genital herpes by phoning directory enquiries and asking for genitourinary medicine, sexually transmitted disease or venereal disease.
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