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2.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6854011

ABSTRACT

In Ibadan, Nigeria, an Enterobius vermicularis worm was found in the urine of a soldier complaining of urethral irritation that had started 4 hours after coitus. After his first post-coital micturition, which yielded the worm, the irritation stopped. There was convincing evidence that the worm had entered the soldier's urethra from his partner's perianal region (rear-entry coital position, no ejaculation because of partner's complaint of painful coitus, the partner was a school girl of 15, enterobiasis is common in young school girls in the city, etc.).


Subject(s)
Coitus , Oxyuriasis/transmission , Urethral Diseases/transmission , Adolescent , Enterobius/isolation & purification , Female , Humans , Male , Oxyuriasis/parasitology , Urethral Diseases/parasitology , Urine/parasitology
3.
J Gen Microbiol ; 119(2): 351-9, 1980 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7229613

ABSTRACT

Microbiologically inapparent urogenital infection appeared to be induced in male guinea-pigs inoculated intra-urethrally with low doses of the guinea-pig inclusion conjunctivitis strain (GP-IC) of Chlamydia psittaci. This state was indicated by the ability of inoculated animals to donate eye infection to normal animals caged with them. Donors failed to develop overt urogenital infection throughout the period of transmission judged by both absence of infected cells in urethral scrapings and failure to isolate GP-IC in cell culture; however, inoculation of donors with 5-iododeoxyuridine led to transient appearance of infectivity in scrapings. In distinction from overtly infected animals, donors failed to develop serum antibody and remained susceptible to urethral challenge with larger doses of GP-IC. Animals that had recovered from overt urethral infection were resistant to challenge and appeared unable to transmit eye infection.


Subject(s)
Carrier State , Psittacosis/transmission , Urethral Diseases/transmission , Animals , Antibodies, Bacterial/analysis , Chlamydophila psittaci/immunology , Conjunctivitis, Inclusion/transmission , Female , Guinea Pigs , Male , Psittacosis/etiology , Psittacosis/immunology , Urethral Diseases/etiology , Urethral Diseases/immunology
4.
Can Med Assoc J ; 119(7): 731-2, 1978 Oct 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-709473

ABSTRACT

Extragenital gonorrhea was seen in 65% of 54 cases of gonorrhea in 43 homosexual men attending a venereal diseases clinic between 1974 and 1977; in 21 cases the infection was extragenital only. This type of gonorrhea was often asymptomatic and was associated with a high rate of failure of initial treatment in 6 of the 50 cases in which the patient returned for follow-up assessment, and in 5 of the 6 the persistent infection was extragenital. Syphillis was seen concomitantly or had previously occurred in 6 of the 54 cases. Fifteen of 28 cases of primary, secondary or early latent syphilis seen in men during the same study period had occurred in homosexuals. Appropriate testing for extragenital gonorrhea and for syphilis is important in homosexual men who present for examination, and homosexuality with the possibility of extragenital gonorrhea should be considered in a man with syphilis of recent onset.


Subject(s)
Gonorrhea/epidemiology , Homosexuality , Gonorrhea/transmission , Humans , Male , Ontario , Rectal Diseases/epidemiology , Rectal Diseases/transmission , Syphilis/complications , Syphilis/epidemiology , Urethral Diseases/epidemiology , Urethral Diseases/transmission
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