About Trichomoniasis Tucson AZ

If trichomoniasis is so common and causes significant risks to women's health, one would expect to find more interest in its prevention. There are several reasons that this STD has been ignored. Click here to continue reading this article ...

Kantor Gerome MD
(520) 742-6863
2055 W Hospital Dr
Tucson, AZ
Thompson Susan J Ansthslgst
(520) 795-7650
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Zamudio Roberto
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1701 W Saint Marys Rd
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Donnelly Christine MD
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630 N Alvernon Way Ste 251
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Tucson Dermatology Ltd
(520) 886-4199
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Probstfeld Michael R MD
(520) 318-3004
6422 E Speedway Blvd
Tucson, AZ
Moffat Kelly OD
(520) 888-6600
6130 N La Cholla Blvd
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Singh Gurinder P MD
(520) 547-5725
2055 W Hospital Dr Ste 255
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Bush Michael MD
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4323 E 5th St
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Warner Janet P MD
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About Trichomoniasis

Article Medically Reviewed By:

David Soper, MD

Professor, Department of Ob/Gyn Medical University of South Carolina Charleston, SC

Overview

What Is It?
Trichomoniasis is the most common curable sexually transmitted disease (STD) in the United States. Infected women may experience a frothy, yellow-green vaginal discharge with a strong odor, discomfort during intercourse and urination, or itching in the genital area.

Maybe you haven't heard of this infection. It is the stepchild of sexually transmitted disease—one that is hard enough to pronounce, let alone find information about why it is important to avoid.

Ironically, trichomoniasis (trick-o-mon-i-a-sis or "trich") is the most common curable sexually transmitted disease (STD) in the United States. In recent years, however, diagnosing and treating this disease has become a greater priority as new research has shown that it is not quite as harmless as was once thought.

Each year, an estimated 7.4 million cases of trichomoniasis occur in the United States. Trichomoniasis usually causes no symptoms in men; when it does cause symptoms, some men experience irritation inside the penis, mild discharge, or slight burning after urination or ejaculation. Some women with the infection experience a frothy, yellow-green vaginal discharge with a strong odor, discomfort during intercourse and urination, or itching in the genital area. In rare cases, pain in the lower abdomen can also occur. Women infected with trichomoniasis appear to be more at risk of acquiring HIV (human immunodeficiency virus) and other STDs.

If trichomoniasis is so common and causes significant risks to women's health, one would expect to find more interest in its prevention. There are several reasons that this STD has been ignored. First, its symptoms—primarily discharge and irritation of the vagina and urethra—have been seen as troubling but not taken as serious as other STDs. And second, the most common treatments, the drugs metronidazole and tinidazole are highly effective and have not been threatened by the development of resistant organisms that have caused problems in treating other STDs.

The organisms that causes trichomoniasis are protozoan (the simplest, single-cell organism in the animal kingdom) called trichomonads, the most common being Trichomonas vaginalis. This parasite resides primarily in the genitourinary tract, where it finds the warmth and moisture needed to grow and multiply.

Trichomoniasis is the least common of three types of vaginitis. The other two are bacterial vaginosis (BV), which is an overgrowth of normal bacteria found in the vagina, and vulvovaginal candidiasis, more commonly known as yeast infection. The overall prevalence of trichomoniasis makes up only about five percent of vaginal infections.

As with BV, recent research has clearly shown that trichomoniasis can be associated with preterm delivery complications. And pregnant women with trichomoniasis may have babies born...

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