Question Posted Wednesday November 23 2011, 7:43 pm
So I had a lot of sex in a bout 5 days. Last night I noticed when I started urinating I felt like a pain, not really a burn at all, more like a stabbing in my urethra towards the end of my piss. There isn't any possible way it could be an STD. I want to know why this is happening, and what I should do about it?
Either that or you hurt your penis during sex (could happen), or you have some kind of urinary tract infection. Whatever the case, dude, you need to visit your doctor. Usually the pain you describe, though, is a symptom of gonorrhea. [ VoiceofReason's advice column | Ask VoiceofReason A Question ]
adviceman49 answered Thursday November 24 2011, 10:16 am: Why can't it be an STD? Just because you used protection does not mean you were totally protected from STDs. Some STDs cannot be prevented by condoms. If you are not aware of this, I apologize for breaking it to you in this way, but better you find out now then wait and find out the hard way.
I'm not going to go through a list of STDs that condoms won't protect you from. You can find them out from the clinic you go to for and STD check. You may or may not have an STD, you need to be check to make sure one way or the other. Until you find out no sex with anyone. Be prepared to give the clinic the names of anyone you have had sex with as they too will need to be checked. The health department will want this information so that they can stop the spread of whatever STD you may have been infected with.
If the clinic offers education on STD prevention you should take it. This is the best way to protect yourself.
My advice: Go to a clinic, your doctor or a walk in 24 clinic ASAP. The sooner you know the better. If you are over 14 and living at home your medical privacy is protected by law. Meaning you can see a doctor with out mom or dad present. Anything you say to the doctor or are treated for is confidential. BY law the doctor can not tell anyone, not even your parents without you written permission, which must be signed in front of a staff member. You cannot be bullied into giving your permission or it is not valid. This law is called HIPPA and is a Federal Law which is specifically designed for these types of situations. [ adviceman49's advice column | Ask adviceman49 A Question ]
NinjaNeer answered Wednesday November 23 2011, 7:50 pm: Sometimes when you have sex you can get bacteria and other nasty things pushed up your urethra, especially if you're female. It can cause a urinary tract irritation (or can worsen into an infection).
If it doesn't go away within a few days, you may need antibiotics. In the meantime, drink tons of water and see if that flushes out the irritants. And always make sure that you pee after sex, because it keeps things clean in there! [ NinjaNeer's advice column | Ask NinjaNeer A Question ]
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