Treatment Overview
Gonorrhea causes no long-term problems if it is
treated early in the course of the infection before any complications develop.
Untreated gonorrhea can lead to many complications.
Initial treatment
Gonorrhea is treated with
antibiotics.5 Treatment is
recommended for:
- A person who has a positive gonorrhea
test.
- Anyone who has had sexual contact in the past 60 days with a
person diagnosed with gonorrhea, whether or not they have symptoms or used
condoms.
- A newborn whose mother has gonorrhea at the time of
delivery.
If you are prescribed more than one dose of an antibiotic, be
sure to take your antibiotic exactly as directed. If you miss doses or don't
take the full course of medicine, the gonorrhea infection may not be
cured.
Do not have sexual contact with anyone:
- While you are being
treated.
- Until both you and your partner(s) have been tested and
treated. If you are treated for gonorrhea and your sex partner is not, you will
probably become infected again.
If your treatment is a single dose of antibiotic, wait at least 7
days after taking the dose before having any sexual contact.
Always use a
condom when you have sex. This helps protect you from
sexually transmitted diseases.
Treatment if the condition does not get better
Symptoms that do not go away after treatment may be caused by
another gonorrhea infection or treatment failure.
Certain strains of the gonorrhea bacteria have become
resistant to some antibiotics, including quinolones,
penicillin, tetracycline, and sulfa drugs. When bacteria become resistant to an
antibiotic, they no longer can be killed by that medicine.5
If you have been treated for gonorrhea and don't get better, you
may be retested with a
gonorrhea culture to see if there is bacterial
resistance to the antibiotic you were taking. If there is bacterial resistance,
you will need another antibiotic to cure the infection.
What To Think About
To prevent reinfection, don’t have sex until any partner that
might be infected is tested and treated. 3
Some people who have gonorrhea also have
chlamydia. The CDC recommends that drug treatment for
gonorrhea also include antibiotics that are effective in treating chlamydia.
For more information, see the topic
Chlamydia.
Pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) is a serious
complication of gonorrhea that can lead to
infertility, chronic pelvic pain, and
ectopic pregnancy. To prevent PID, prompt treatment of
gonorrhea is important. For more information, see the topic
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID).
Treatment of
disseminated gonococcal infection (DGI) usually
requires hospitalization and antibiotic treatment given
intravenously (IV) or into a muscle (intramuscularly,
IM).
In the United States, your health professional must report to the
state health department that you have gonorrhea.