Ever get random urethral irritation? It might not just be the rubbing up against your clothes. Found a very interesting article that deals with the many causes of urethritis.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Urethritis in Men Linked to Oral SexBy Randy DotingaHealthDay ReporterFRIDAY, Jan. 6 (HealthDay News) -- New research suggests that the gonorrhea-like condition known as urethritis , perhaps the most common sexually transmitted disease, can spread to men when they're on the receiving end of fellatio."This one really nails it down," said Dr. Hunter Handsfield, a professor of medicine at the University of Washington who wrote a commentary about the findings.Urethritis, a condition related to a number of health problems, such as urinary tract infections and some sexually transmitted diseases, causes inflammation of the urethra. It can lead to genital discharge, burning during urination and redness and swelling at the tip of the penis, said Dr. Jeffrey D. Klausner, director of STD Prevention and Control Services with the San Francisco Department of Public Health. The symptoms "usually signify an infection due to a germ, like a bacteria or virus," he said.Urethritis usually goes away on its own or is easily treated with antibiotics, Klausner said. But in some cases, it can result in serious complications, including permanent damage to the urethra in both men and women, especially if it's not treated.According to Handsfield, urethritis brings more men to sexually transmitted disease clinics in the United States than any other condition or disease, and it may be the most common STD among both men and women.In the new study, Australian researchers recruited 329 men with urethritis symptoms that weren't related to gonorrhea and 307 healthy men. The researchers tested the men and asked them about their sexual habits.About five percent of the cases were directly related to germs from the mouth, including adenoviruses and a form of herpes. The researchers also found that urethritis without an apparent cause was more common in men who were on the receiving end of oral sex from their female or male partners.The study findings appear in the Dec. 28 online edition of the Journal of Infectious Diseases.The research points to the potential influence of normally innocuous germs in the mouth, Handsfield said. "It suggests that some of these cases might be due to bacteria that are entirely normal when they're in the mouth but cause inflammation in the urethra."This also suggests that men shouldn't assume that getting a case of urethritis from a partner is a sign that she or he has been unfaithful, Handsfield said. The urethritis may have simply come from normal mouth germs.By contrast, there's no evidence that urethritis is easily passed to women during cunnilingus, Handsfield said. In fact, he said, cunnilingus seems to be safer when it comes to STD transmission than fellatio.What does the urethritis finding mean for sexually active men? "Men who receive oral sex need to be concerned about STDs and talk to their doctor about what screening tests might be appropriate or how to reduce their risk for getting infections," Klausner said.SOURCES: Hunter Handsfield, M.D., STD researcher, Battelle Research, and professor of medicine, University of Washington, Seattle; Jeffrey D. Klausner, M.D., M.P.H., director, STD Prevention and Control Services, San Francisco Department of Public Health; Dec. 28, 2005, online edition, Journal of Infectious DiseasesCopyright © 2006 ScoutNews LLC. All rights reserved.Just thought it was an interesting read.
-
For those who masturbate with saliva . . .
-
So your saliva has no bacteria in it? The point is that there are many causes of urethritis, which is typically associated with gonorrea and chlamidiya, and the fact that many people masturbate with their own saliva means that they are very much prone to bacterial infections. Yes, the article emphasized fellatio from one partner to another, but the same bacteria in fellatio that is causing urethritis can be transmitted from one's own mouth as well. It is bacteria. Compare it to a urinary tract infection.
-
In general that might be correct. But say you had oral herpes. It is possible to give yourself genital herpes if the virus is active at the time and you use saliva to masturbate with.
Same goes for is someone is giving you oral sex, and they have oral herpes and it's active, they can give you genital herpes.
So there are exceptions to your own germs not giving you anything.
-
That is interesting, but it presumably occurs because the herpes infection in one part of the body activates the whole body's immune system against the virus. Do mouth bacteria activate the body's immune system at all?There are certainly some infections that can be transmitted to another part of the body long after they are established - warts, for example.
-
Well trust me it's possible. My ex was a medical officer in the US Navy, and he told me about it first. I was still skeptical so I asked my family physician and she confirmed that the herpes virus can be transmitted from oral herpes to genital herpes, whether it's between partners or to one self.Could the possibility be lower one its contracted in another part of the body, it’s possible I didn’t get that involved in the convo with my physician. But regardless it’s still possible.