A cervical smear, or light micrograph of pap smear, from someone with bacterial veginosis
Dr. Y. Boussugan/CNRI/Science Photo Library
Women with bacterial veginosis, a recurrent condition that increases the risk of pregnancy complications, can be treated with antibiotics from their male sexual partners, according to a test, according to a test, which found that it almost reduces the risk of returning to symptoms.
“Treating male partners created the most important interval in improvement of repetition rates in women that we have seen for decades,” Catariona Bradshow At the University of Monash in Melbourne, Australia, who led the work.
Bacterial veginosis (wife) affects A quarter of women around fertility Worldwide. This occurs when “harmful” bacteria overgrow vagina, causing vaginal discharge Fold gray-white and smell fishWith potential serious complications. Says Bradshaw, “This increases a woman’s risk of achieving a wide range of sexually transmitted infections, such as HIV, and complications in pregnancy, such as premature birth and abortion,” Bradshow says.
Bradeshaw says, doctors usually use antibiotics as tablets or use a cream that can be applied inside the vagina, but symptoms often recur because sex seems to rebuild the sex -affected bacteria. “One of two women will get their wife back within three to six months of recommended treatment,” says Bradshaw.
To address this, Bradshow and his colleagues recruited 137 monogamus women in Australia with their male partners with bacterial veginosis. All women took standard antibiotics for a week, while about half of their partners were given oral antibiotics and asked to apply an antibiotic cream to the penis in the same period. The remaining men did not get any treatment. No participants were transgender.
Three months later, 63 percent of women whose colleagues were not treated were recurring symptoms, while only 35 percent of women experienced a recurrence with partners receiving antibiotics. “This is definitely a major impact that creates a meaningful intervention for this group of women,” says Jane’s van de wizert At the University of Utract in Netherlands.
“I see a ton of women who have issues with the running wife and, of course, I am implementing this new information in my own clinical practice,” Christina Muzani At Alabama University in Birmingham.
The team did not track all the participants in a long period, but some returned to contact after years, to say that they were free from symptoms. “In the last week, I have talked to someone who has been clear about his wife for two years because he participated – and these women were highly recurrent before the test,” Lenaka Wodstryl At Monash University.
However, this approach will not work for women with casual sexual partners, where they can find it difficult to follow antibiotics, call van de wizert. Even in monotonous relationships, men may not always be ready to take antibiotics, she says. “We have seen it with the use of condoms, which also reduces the wife’s recurrence – can be really difficult for women to use condoms for their male partners.”
Subject:
(Tagstotransite) infection (T) Sex (T) Bacteria