Getting sick can be terrifying, especially when the infection is targeting your most intimate areas—enter gonorrhea, the United States’ second‑most prevalent sexually transmitted disease. These 10 frightening facts about gonorrhea will make you think twice before taking any chances.
10 Frightening Facts You Need to Know
10 The Inspiration For Its Name
Its moniker traces back to a rather graphic image: a penis unintentionally spilling “seed.” The ancient Greek physician Galen coined the term in the second century, believing the discharge resembled seed streaming from a male organ. That vivid depiction gave rise to one of the disease’s more notorious nicknames, “the drip.”

9 Why It’s Called ‘The Clap’
The slang “the clap” dates to a crude remedy used centuries ago. Men afflicted with the infection would literally “clap” heavy objects—sometimes a hefty tome or the butt of a rifle—against their genitals to force out the foul discharge. This brutal method was especially common among soldiers, which may explain the wartime surge in cases. Today, antibiotics have replaced the slap‑down approach, though rising drug resistance threatens to revive older, harsher tactics.

8 Super Gonorrhea
The “super” strain of gonorrhea is fast becoming a global nightmare. Over 90 % of the 77 nations participating in a WHO‑backed surveillance program report at least some level of antibiotic resistance. Unprotected oral sex is a major driver, as throat infections are often treated with antibiotics that inadvertently foster resistant bacteria. Experts warn we’re perched on the brink of a post‑antibiotic era, with the last viable drug classes dwindling fast.

7 More People Are Getting Infected
Case numbers are climbing steeply. Between 2015 and 2016, U.S. gonorrhea diagnoses surged 18.5 % to a staggering 468,514. Since the 2009 trough, infections have risen 48.6 %, and at least 16 documented instances of antibiotic‑resistant “super” gonorrhea have emerged. A recent Japanese case involving a sex worker proved unresponsive to both cefixime and ceftriaxone, pushing clinicians toward azithromycin—yet even that drug is losing potency as funding for STD clinics dwindles.

6 Gonorrhea Can Trigger Other Medical Problems
Beyond the classic genital symptoms, gonorrhea can sow trouble elsewhere. It may incite heart valve inflammation years down the line, and pregnant women risk passing the infection to newborns, potentially causing severe eye infections or even blindness. In both genders, the disease can spark pelvic inflammatory disease and sterility, underscoring its capacity for long‑term misery.

5 Questionable Moral Character
Historically, gonorrhea was weaponized as a moral indictment. A 1918 lecture for African‑American soldiers warned that respectable citizens rarely contracted the disease; if they did, it was blamed on a disloyal spouse. The author described the infection as “the running range,” emphasizing its rapid spread and dire consequences, even citing infant blindness as a punishment for the “meanest of criminals.” The same rhetoric painted women as the primary vectors, casting them as “booby traps” in a lurid moral tableau.

4 Condoms May Not Work
Contrary to popular belief, condoms don’t guarantee protection against gonorrhea. The disease can hitch a ride on uncovered skin or hidden sores, slipping past the barrier. Moreover, many infections are silent: up to 15 % of men and roughly 80 % of women show no symptoms initially, delaying diagnosis and facilitating unwitting transmission. The latency can extend to 30 days in women, underscoring the need for regular testing.

3 Likelihood Of Getting Other STDs
While hard data are scarce, estimates suggest that more than 70 % of young people who contract gonorrhea will acquire another sexually transmitted infection within a year. Untreated gonorrhea can scar reproductive tissue and spread to distant organs, amplifying the risk of co‑infections and compounding health complications.

2 Mercury Injections
Before penicillin took hold in the 1940s, physicians resorted to hazardous remedies, notably mercury injections directly into the penis. Other heavy‑metal and mineral treatments—silver nitrate, arsenic, gold, bismuth—were also employed, judged solely by whether the discharge ceased. Modern research even explored Listerine mouthwash as a possible adjunct, finding a modest reduction in pharyngeal bacterial counts compared with saline rinses.

1 Famous Victims
Even the famous haven’t escaped the scourge. Actress Tallulah Bankhead suffered a severe gonorrhea infection that prompted an emergency hysterectomy; she was mistakenly thought to have a stomach tumor and emerged from the hospital weighing only 70 lb. Notorious gangster John Dillinger was diagnosed in 1924 while incarcerated, receiving silver‑nitrate injections. Literary figure James Boswell, despite claiming condom use, chronicled his first bout of gonorrhea in his diary, noting swollen testicles and his wife’s reluctant assistance in treatment.


