Doctor,
I also forgot to mention, too, that it seems as though my left testicle has atrophied since this infection. I know that there can be a difference in size between the two testes, but my left one is MUCH smaller than my right, and I never noticed this before the infection. Is it possible for chlamydia to be responsible for testicular atrophy? Thanks in advance for your help.
In case it wasn't clear, your semen sounds fine. Sometimes it can be gelatinous, sometimes thick, sometimes liquidy, sometimes there are little globules in it, whatever. Normal texture really varies considerably. :-)
Semen comes from the prostate, seminal vesicles, and bulbourethral glands. The texture really varies--it mostly depends on how hydrated you are, diet, etc.
But regardless of how thick your semen looks when you ejaculate, after a little while it liquifies. It's pretty cool. My husband donated semen for male birth control research, and by the time I dropped the little tubes off at the lab, it looked completely different from when he ejaculated.
Thanks for your reply. Yes, I am well aware that it can vary considerably, but the fact remains that mine is significantly "off," if you will, of what most appear to be. That, and the fact that it did not always look this way. It was much more homogeneous and not as white before I had Chlamydia. I have done research into this and it appears that, macroscopically, semen has an appearance of a homogeneous off-white consistency and color. Mine is bright white and heterogeneous. So, ???
No STD is known to alter semen consistency, color, or other appearnce. The only exception might be during the acute, early stages of urethritis (gonorrhea, chlamydia, NGU), but even that is only a guess; I have never seen it happen (but maybe my patients just didn't say anything about it). But a distant past infection can't do this, and I'm sure the variations in appearance of your semen have nothing to do with your chlamydial infection 3 years ago or any other STD. Further, the variations in appearance you describe sound entirely normal to me--although I'm not an expert in that area.
Note that MedHelp forum administrators don't generally see any follow-up comments before the initial response, but in this case I saw your question below about testicular size. Neither chlamydia nor any other STD can cause that, unless there is acute epididymitis at the time of the infection--which is always a very obvious problem, with acute tenderness, pain, and swelling. As for your semen variations, the size of your testicle has nothing to do with your past chlamydia or any other STD.
My advice is for you to describe your symptoms to a personal health care provider, preferably a dermatologist--to assess whether either problem is abnormal and, if so, to figure out the cause.
Good luck-- HHH, MD