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Safer Sex

March 23rd, 2007 by Eric

safer-sex.jpgWe are all sexual — from birth to death. When we decide to have sex, we want it to be satisfying — whether we are women, men, intersex or transgender, married or single, young or old, straight, lesbian, gay, or bisexual. Enjoying our sexuality is a normal, natural part of life. Most people have taken risks when they have had sex — risks that include getting sexually transmitted infections. People take so many risks that up to one out of two get an infection some time in their lives. The risks people take can be dangerous. Many sexually transmitted infections can:

* last a lifetime
* put stress on relationships
* cause sterility
* cause birth defects
* lead to major illness and death

If you do find that you have contracted a STD, it is important to contact ALL previous and current partners. As you do not know how long you have had the disease (as it might have been dormant for sometime) and also you do not know if they have already got the disease. It is imperative that all sexual partners must undergo an STD check. Unfortunately, many people consider having STIs to be a moral issue. The stigma and shame some people feel because of this may lead them to neglect taking good care of their sexual health. Please don’t let embarrassment be a health risk for you. Speak frankly and openly with your clinician about your sex life and your sexual health concerns.

Safer sex is anything we do to lower our risk of getting a sexually transmitted infection. It’s about getting more pleasure with less risk. Three Steps to Safer Sex:

1. Become honest with ourselves about the risks we take.
2. Decide which risks we are willing to take — and which ones we aren’t willing to take.
3. Find ways to make our sex play as safe and satisfying as possible.

The most important ways to reduce your risk are:

* Keep your partner’s body fluids out of your body — vagina, anus, or mouth. The body — fluids to be most careful about are blood, cum, pre-cum, vaginal fluids, and the discharge from sores caused by sexually transmitted infections.
* Don’t touch sores or growths that are caused by sexually transmitted infections.
Safer sex also means protecting your partner.
* Don’t allow your body fluids to get into your partner’s body.
* Don’t have sex if you have sores or other symptoms of infection.
* Have routine checkups for infections.
* Get the correct treatment if you become infected.

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Posted in STI, Sex, Uncategorized | No Comments »

Microbiologists crack genome of a parasite that causes common STD

January 18th, 2007 by Eric

Scientists at UCLA and NYU have deciphered the genome of the parasite causing trichomoniasis, and their research may lead to new approaches to improve the diagnosis and treatment of this common sexually transmitted disease.

Trichomoniasis affects an estimated 170 million people a year, with more than 5 million cases reported in North America. This global health problem results when the single-celled parasite Trichomonas vaginalis sets up house in the reproductive tract.

Led by Patricia Johnson, a UCLA professor of microbiology in the department of microbiology, immunology and molecular genetics, and Jane Carlton, an associate professor in the department of medical parasitology at New York University School of Medicine, the team of scientists took four years to crack the surprisingly large genome of this parasite. They published the draft sequence of the parasite’s genome in the Jan. 12 issue of the journal Science.

“Patricia Johnson cloned the first Trichomonas vaginalis gene in 1990 as an assistant professor at UCLA, and it is tremendously gratifying that she is now senior author on a landmark publication describing the entire genome,” said Jeffery F. Miller, chair of microbiology, immunology and molecular genetics at UCLA and UCLA’s M. Philip Davis Professor of Microbiology and Immunology. “The implications of this work range from fundamental insights into early evolution to understanding pathogenesis and developing drugs and vaccines. This is a major accomplishment in the field.”

“T. vaginalis is an extremely successful parasite, capable of establishing and maintaining infections in both men and women,” Johnson said. “Symptoms vary greatly among infected individuals, and the reason for this wide range of variable pathogenic outcomes is poorly understood. Among the many new insights brought by deciphering the genome sequence of this organism are ones that provide new clues for identifying critical factors that are responsible for pathogenesis.”

In women, the parasite binds to the vaginal lining and is capable of destroying vaginal epithelial cells, which make up the surface of this tissue, Johnson said. This results in vaginitis, with irritation of local tissues. Erosion of cervical tissues may occur, and complications can result in sterility. A big threat from infection also occurs in pregnant women, who are at risk for ruptured membranes, preterm deliveries and low-birth-weight babies. In men, the parasite is a cause of nongonococcal urethritis, but infection is generally asymptomatic and self-limiting.

In both men and women, trichomoniasis is known to increase susceptibility to HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. “In countries where AIDS runs rampant, such as South Africa, the incidence of trichomoniasis is also extraordinarily high, and trichomoniasis is thought to have significantly contributed to the spread of HIV,” Johnson said.

To survive, T. vaginalis must adapt to multiple microenvironments and changes in the reproductive tract. A critical property of infection is the parasite’s ability to adhere to human cells and to kill neighboring cells.

“The sequence of its genome now reveals a number of factors, including putative adhesion proteins and secreted factors that may result in killing of human cells,” Johnson said. “Should future studies confirm a critical role for these, they could provide important therapeutic targets.”

Currently, only one class of drugs — nitroimidazoles — is licensed for treatment of trichomoniasis in the United States, and the emergence of parasite strains that are resistant to these drugs is on the rise. There is a clear need to develop additional effective drugs, Johnson said.

The T. vaginalis genome project began in 2002 and was funded by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, part of the National Institutes of Health. The first draft sequence was available in 2003, but it took years of additional work by 66 scientists in 10 countries, with expertise in cell biology, biochemistry and bioinformatics, to complete the work reported this week in Science.

In addition to providing putative pathogenic and therapeutic targets, the genome could help with diagnostics too. “This genome contains a large number of repeat sequences, which could be used to devise a diagnostic test that would specifically identify this pathogen,” said researcher Jane Carlton from New York University.

The parasite’s large genome has nearly 26,000 confirmed genes, which is on par with the human genome. There may be an additional 34,000 unconfirmed genes, bringing the total gene count to about 60,000.

“T. vaginalis has one of the highest gene counts of any organism in the microbe, animal or plant community, probably because of the puzzlingly high number of genes repeated in the genome,” Carlton said.

The scientists say they still plan to work on a final gene count. “The genome was much, much bigger than we had expected, actually 10 times what we had expected,” Carlton said. All other previously sequenced parasites had much smaller genomes.

T. vaginalis is typically a pear-shaped organism, but when it sticks to the vaginal wall, the parasite flattens and dramatically increases its surface area. The scientists hypothesize that this trait brought the microbe a selective advantage during its evolution: A parasite with a big surface area, enabled by a big genome, is better at colonizing the area it is infecting. The organism also shows predatory behavior. It “eats up” good bacteria in the vagina using a process called phagocytosis. This makes the vagina more alkaline and more hospitable toward Trichomonas and other pathogens.

This little bug presented a sizable genomics challenge.

“The big issue is that we don’t really have the capability of dealing with a genome like Trichomonas,” Carlton said. The sequencing technology and the computer algorithms typically used to assemble and align sequenced gene fragments with computers are not available to deal with this parasite. The cause of the headache for researchers: the repeats in the genome.

To sequence a genome, it is broken down into “reads,” which are snippets of DNA with 600 units, or bases. Computer programs then identify similar reads — the ones with overlapping fragments of the same sequence. These fragments are then collapsed into contiguous sequences, or “contigs,” so the genome is put back together like a jigsaw puzzle.

Because Trichomonas has many repeating sequences, the computer algorithm got completely stuck. It could not assemble the contigs. The scientists were stumped. Only after bioinformatics experts and software engineers, including colleagues Steven Salzberg, Arthur Delcher and Michael Schatz from the University of Maryland, reworked the algorithm to tackle the informatics challenge could the genome project proceed to the draft now published.

“This project provides a good example of the most productive way to approach scientific research that relies on cutting-edge, advanced technologies, as so many projects do these days,” Johnson said. “A coordinated, synergistic team effort involving many dedicated scientists with different expertises and perspectives and a strong drive to succeed — that’s what it takes.”
Source: HULIQ

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Posted in STI | No Comments »

Safe Sex Message Campaign Could Work for ED Too

January 8th, 2007 by Eric

ive-got-ed.jpgThe Government recently unveiled a new £4 million pound campaign to raise awareness of sexually transmitted infections. The campaign designed to target young people, displays attractive, seemingly healthy people sporting designer underwear, across which is scrawled the names of various STI’s such as Chlamydia, Gnorrhoea, Genital Herpes, Syphilis and HIV. The idea behind it being that it’s not easy to tell who’s got a Sexually Transmitted Infection, therefore condoms should always be part of your essential going out kit. Slogans such as ‘Hot pants but beware of what lurks beneath them.’ may prove to be an effective deterrent to risky sexual behavior. I wonder how effective a similar campaign to raise awareness of erectile dysfunction would be.

A billboard with a muscular young man with ‘I’VE GOT ED’ written on his shorts may be just the ticket to get the message out that erectile dysfunction can happen at any age. At a time when obesity rates are soaring, the psychological pressure young people are under is immense and drug and alcohol abuse is rampant, ED may be more prevalent in the UK than anyone realizes. Yet no one wants to acknowledge it . Noone wants media exposure to it. And who feels comfortable with children in the room when a Viagra ad comes on? But given the utter despair that men of any age feel following a bout of ED, it is very important that the issue be addressed and the message delivered, that is common and there is help available.

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Posted in STI, Sex, AIDS, Erectile Dysfunction | 1 Comment »

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