That is the right thing to do. EWH
Thanks very much doc. Will pursue other avenues. All the best.
No, 6 weeks does not change my opinion. Still unlikely to be related to the receipt of oral sex you describe. Furthermore if you had NGU, I would have expected your symptoms to have al least begun to improve, if not resolved by now. Further support that your symptoms are not NGU.
Similarly, the genital rubbing does not change my opinion either. I think you need to consider other causes for your symptoms. EWH
Thanks for the amazingly quick response doc.
I have a couple of clarificationis/questions if I may:
The time from encounter to symptoms was 6 weeks not 8. I don't know if that makes a difference. The last 2 weeks I have been doing the tests and taking the medicines.
Currently my syptoms persist, but it is only 53 hours since I took Azithromycin.
Also, a little more detail:
At one point in the encounter when we went from kissing to oral, her genitals rubbed over mine unprotected. This was however the only genital contact. Is this pertinent?
As I have never had the symptoms before the coincidence is really strange.
Thanks again for your help.
Welcome to the Forum. It is unlikely that the symptoms you noticed 8 weeks following your potential exposure was related to that exposure. The onset of NGU typically occurs at least 3-5 days following sexual contact and most typically in the week or two afterwards. I suspect the onset of symptoms at 8 weeks is largely a coincidence and nothing more. NGU (or NSU, they are the same) following oral sex is virtually never caused by chlamydia which is not transmitted by oral contact and is thought to be due to the introduction of bacteria from the mouth to the urethra, leading to irritation. Your trimethoprim may have been effective therapy for your NGU (has not been well studied) and the azithromycin you took is recommended therapy for the disorder. Had you had sexually acquired NGU, you have been effectively treated. My guess however is that you did not have an STD.
As for your specific questions:
1. The trimethoprim may have caused some cultures to be negative but, as I said above, the therapy you received is the recommended therapy. You should be confident that you have been treated if that was the problem (which I doubt was the case).
2. See above. It is unlikely to say the least.
3. See above, The effect of azithromycin for NGU occurs in no more than 3 days. If your symptoms are continuing, they are not likely to be due to NGU but have some other cause which you should explore with your health care provider.
4. It is recommended that sexual exposed sexual partners to persons with NGU receive the same treatment (azithromycin) as the symptomatic person. Whether that is truly needed for NGU following oral sex has not been studied. Further, as I have already said, I doubt that you had NGU. Thus I do not think your wife needs treatment in this instance.
5. No. If you had herpes there would be lesions and trichomonas is not spread through oral sex.
6. No- no reason for concern, even if this was NGU.
7. I doubt that this was an STD. Perhaps it was a urinary tract infection although this would be somewhat unusual for a man less than 40. If your symptoms have resolved, I would try to move forward. If they have not, I would seek other explanations by working with your health care provider.
I hope these comments have been helpful to you. EWH