Friday, July 25, 2008

SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED DISEASES






What Are Sexually Transmitted Diseases?
Contagious diseases that are spread from one partner to the other during sexual intercourse are called as sexually transmitted diseases, or by their very popular anagram, STDs. STDs can affect anybody within the sphere of sexual population; hence it can be said that all STDs are global problems. Some of the very common STDs that are affecting the world population today are syphilis, gonorrhea, genital herpes, Chlamydia infection, hepatitis A, hepatitis B and AIDS.
STDs are mainly transmitted due to penetrative sexual intercourse, i.e. when the man inserts his penis into the vagina of the female. But most of the STDs can also pass on during other types of sexual activities like oral sex and anal sex. The microorganisms causing these diseases could be viruses, bacteria or fungi and they can generally live in most of the body fluids. The chances of sexually transmitted diseases are very high when a person has sex with many partners, or has sex with a person who has many partners. Most STDs can be prevented by using a condom during any kind of sexual contact with a person of unknown sexual history.
Since there are many STDs, there are also many symptoms. Syphilis, which is also known as the French disease is diagnosable by the presence of button-sized warts called chancres near the genital area. These chancres could also develop on the anus and in the throat region. Gonorrhea is commonly known as the clap or the drip disease. With a gonorrheal infection, a person will have continuous mucus-like discharge from the penis or from the vulva. In people with genital herpes, there are blister-like ulcers developed around the genitals. With almost all STDs, there are urinary problems.
Prevention of STDs is mostly through abstinence. Out of all the sexually transmitted diseases in humans, only two of them – hepatitis A and hepatitis B – are preventable by vaccination, but the others aren’t. The best way of preventing them is then to limit the number of sexual partners, and to have sex only with people whose sexual history is properly known about. Using a condom is also a good option, but if the condom is used in the wrong way, then it may lead to an infection. Also, condoms are not guaranteed protection. Condoms can only prevent the penis from coming in touch with the skin of the other partner; but it cannot prevent the rest of the genital area from coming into contact. Syphilis sores which are present all around the genital area can be transmitted even after using a condom.
Once a person is sexually infected, it is very necessary that he/she stop all sexual activity. It is a moral responsibility of any person to check the further spread of the STD. Also the person must make it amply clear to his/her spouse that he/she is a victim of the infection. All STDs except AIDS are treatable and the treatment is much more effective if it is started at an early stage.
Treatment of STDs adopts several different ways depending on which is the cause of infection. In conditions like genital herpes, where there is no cure, the infection may last throughout the life of the person. Alarmingly, this disease is found among about half a million in the US alone. Chlamydia is another issue that requires constant screening to prevent from becoming an epidemic. Doctors surreptitiously check teens for such infections. Conditions like hepatitis A and hepatitis B are thought to be self-resolving with little medication.
One bigger concern with the sexually transmitted diseases is the large number of complications they can cause. Most of the STDs can cause impotence in men and infertility in women. Men could suffer from erectile dysfunctions, while both men and women can suffer from pain during urination and/or several abnormalities in the flow or urine. Add to that, there could be severe itching, pain, tenderness and blisters on the affected area. This could indeed make life miserable for the person as long as the STD lasts.
Hepatitis A and hepatitis B can cause severe liver problems in the long run. There could be cirrhosis of the liver, or liver cancer, both of which are fatal conditions. AIDS is the most dangerous of all sexual infections. It has no treatment yet, and the only option with this disease is death.
Sexually transmitted diseases are found more commonly among the sexually teen population of the developed countries. This population is generally ignorant about the repercussions of unsafe sex, and therefore indulges in it till it is too late. With age comes experience, and hence STDs are found to a lesser extent in the older population. Tourists are responsible for carrying STDs from one part of the globe to the other, and so also people who visit commercial sex workers are very much accountable.
Only proper education can control the problem of STDs. Governments of various nations are taking serious steps in eradicating the problem. School syllabi contain references of such diseases, and condoms are being freely distributed by charitable institutions to vulnerable populations.
About the Author
Also Know more on Premature Ejaculation Cure through natural and herbal treatments at http://www.ayurvediccure.com/premature_ejaculation.htm

Gonorrhea - How To Control Sexually Transmitted Diseases
Gonorrhea is one of the main ailments causing trauma to mankind. It is termed as STD or a disease that is sexually transmitted from one person to another. Thick discharges result from the penis and the vagina of the respective infected persons. As per a latest survey, Gonorrhea has posed a serious threat to the health departments of all governments across the globe.
Cases of Gonorrhea have been frequently reported from among those people who are sexually very active. Mention may be made of the teenagers, youths or the African Americans in the USA where on the average 700,500 people annually fall prey to this debilitating ailment. However, this is just the tip of the iceberg; for many such Gonorrhea cases go unreported for various reasons.
Most of the countries regularly take up mass awareness campaigns on the STD diseases when the health volunteers identify and meet the vulnerable sections of the populations in their respective countries. There are clinics and also mobile health units that regularly distribute the necessary aids among the targeted population to ensure that STD diseases, such as Gonorrhea, are kept at bay. Owing to such campaigns, the number of people affected by Gonorrhea has been coming down.
The primary cause of Gonorrhea is the bacterium -- Neisseria gonorrhoeae. This bacterium needs a moist and warm environment to reproduce itself and these ideal locales are to be found in the reproductive section of a woman as well as the urinary canal besides the anus, eyes, throat and also the mouth. Once a man or a woman gets affected by Gonorrhea, the bacterium transforms those places into its habitat to multiply fast and rather easily.
Mentionably, a woman’s reproductive section is made up of three main parts, viz., the fallopian tubes via which the human eggs are transported, the womb or the uterus and the womb opening or the cervix. All these sensitive and vital sections of a woman’s body is very susceptible to Gonorrhea.
The commonly reported symptoms of Gonorrhea are swollen or painful testicles or a sensation of burning during urinating or the penis discharging green colored thick fluid almost akin to the semen. However, these symptoms appear almost a month after the person has been infected by Gonorrhea.
There are a number of ways in which Gonorrhea can be transmitted. The main means is sexual intercourse. The disease is spread via the male sexual organ – the penis – as well as the primary female sexual organ -- the vagina – or the anus and even the mouth. One should always take extra care and use preventive measures (like the condom in the case of males or the loop in the case of women) to check Gonorrhea.
Once ejaculation occurs from an infected male inside the naked vaginal portion of a woman, the woman can get affected by the disease. There are also cases of Gonorrhea being transmitted from an infected woman to a male during sexual intercourse or even while kissing. It is important to remember that anyone can be affected by Gonorrhea several times notwithstanding the fact that this person did undergo treatment for the disease earlier and was cured subsequently. Gonorrhea can pass on to the new-born baby from the affected mother.
About the Author
Nilutpal Gogoi is a writer and a freelance journalist having more than 18 years of service in several audio-visual and print media reputed organizations in North East India. He has published one popular adventure book for children and has published more than 1000 articles for various sites, as such http://www.thehealthiness.com/

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