Chlamydia is a microorganism that is neither a bacterium nor a virus and is a Gram-negative pathogen in terms of its properties. Currently there are several tests to check for chlamydia, including blood tests for mycoplasma antibodies, culture tests of penile or cervical secretions, enzyme-labeled immunoassays, culture tests of male prostate fluid, polymerase chain reaction techniques, complement binding tests (CFT), and indirect immunofluorescence tests. Chlamydia can cause urinary tract infections and reproductive system infections in men, such as causing urinary tract infections, cystitis, chronic prostatitis, and a host of other diseases. Infections in the female reproductive and urinary systems can cause urinary frequency and urgency, abdominal pain, cervicitis, and chronic pelvic inflammatory disease. Chlamydia can also cause infections of the respiratory and digestive systems and the eyes. Therefore, the examination of chlamydia is particularly important to identify the chlamydia infection can be treated with medication, which can effectively achieve the purpose of cure. The choice of tests for Chlamydia trachomatis is subject to the discretion of the clinician, who will make the most appropriate tests based on the body’s condition and the symptoms it produces. The majority of chlamydia is transmitted through impure sexual intercourse, so it is important to be clean and eliminate high-risk sexual behavior to reduce the chances of infection. If you are diagnosed with chlamydia, you need to use antibiotics to treat it in a timely manner.