Levofloxacin (trade name Levaquin) would have prevented chlamydia if exposed, but chlamydia almost never infects the mouth or throat and has never been documented to be transmitted to a partner's genitals by oral sex, so chlamydia isn't an issue. Levo is 100% protective against gonorrhea if the gonorrhea strain is susceptible to it. Resistance of gonorrhea to the quinolone antibiotics (including levo) is increasing in the US but still is rare in most geographic areas, and so far most resistant strains have been found in gay men with gonorrhea. But anyway, if you got gonorrhea, you would know it; asymptomatic infection of the urethra is very rare. As you undoubtedly know, the genital rubbing without penetration cannot transmit gonorrhea or chlamydia. Cipro is identical to levo in its activity against gonorrhea, but is slightly less active against chlamydia.
Gonorrhea and chlamydia rarely lead to serious complications in males, only females. The natural course of untreated infection with either of these STDs is complete resolution; the immune system eventually clears it up. In the pre-antibiotic era, most gonorrhea in men resolved within 6-12 weeks. The duration of untreated chlamydia is less certain, but in men it usually clears up within a few months, and probably always within a year. There is no way to test for past chlamydia or gonorrhea once the infection has resolved. All gonorrhea or chlamydia complications are clinically obvious; that is, your lack of symptoms means you cannot have developed epididymitis, infertility, urethral stricture, or other serious outcomes.
A bottom line is that these infections rarely are serious health problems for men, only women. The importance of male infections is that they signify a risk for the men's partner, not for infected men themselves. There are exceptions to this, but they are rare.
Another bottom line: The sexual exposures you describe were extremely low risk for these or any other STDs.
Good luck-- HHH, MD
Good luck-- HHH, MD
HHH, MD