Women who have gonorrhea can develop serious complications if the infection is untreated. They can get pelvic inflammatory disease (PID). PID is an infection of the uterus, fallopian tubes and ovaries in the woman's pelvis. It can cause pain and, if the tubes scar, infertility. Untreated gonorrhea can also spread to the blood or joints. This condition can be life threatening.
Health care providers use lab tests to diagnose gonorrhea.
Gonorrhea is treated with antibiotics.
Babies can get the infection during birth as they pass through the birth canal. In babies, gonorrhea can cause blindness, joint infection, or a life-threatening blood infection.
What you can do
Ask your health care provider to screen you for gonorrhea early in pregnancy. Many providers do this routinely as part of prenatal care. If you do have gonorrhea, you can get antibiotics to treat the infection. This will prevent any complications for you and your baby.
Be sure your partner is also screened. Partners can pass the infection back and forth between themselves.
While you're pregnant, you can avoid gonorrhea by not having sex. If you do have sex:
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