ADAM STRACHER, MD: I'd say the most common symptom is probably a discharge, either a vaginal discharge or a penile discharge. It is followed by such things as pain when you urinate. In general, as this disease progresses, it can lead to additional pelvic or abdominal pain as various other symptoms or complexes of symptoms develop.
DAVID FOLK THOMAS: When you talk about a discharge, what is that discharge? Is that when you're going to the bathroom? When you're walking around?
ADAM STRACHER, MD: It can be just when you're walking around.
DAVID FOLK THOMAS: What does it look like?
ADAM STRACHER, MD: It's generally a yellowish discharge. Patients who have it come in and what they complain of is I had sex with someone, unprotected sex with someone, say two weeks ago. There is a certain period that this will develop over. It's generally over about 7 to 14 days. So you may go two weeks from your last sexual encounter before you actually start to have a problem.
Patients will say, "Two weeks ago I had unprotected sex. Now I have a discharge or I have pain when I urinate." That will be a sign that they have some infection. Then you have to do an evaluation to determine exactly what the infection is because the symptoms are very nonspecific.