Play safe, avoid oral cancer
When it comes to being responsible — by that I
mean using condoms during sex, many will take the gold. But, do you apply the
same precaution during oral sex?
Did you know that you can contact
sexually-transmitted diseases like HIV/AIDS, syphilis, gonorrhoea, Chlamydia,
and even cancer of the throat from oral sex? I doubt it.
Before now, oral sex was usually considered a
lower-risk sexual activity; but a recent study, published in the Journal of
Sexual Medicine, found that it’s actually becoming a popular, though
unintended, way of spreading sexually transmitted infections.
The researchers state that since oral sex
involves a partner stimulating the genitalia of another person, using the mouth,
including the lips, tongue or teeth, viral and bacterial infections such as
herpes and HIV can be contacted through these means.
The Chief Medical Director of Westover Heights
Clinic in Portland, Oregon, an American private clinic specialising in STDs, Dr.
Tarri Warren, says the risks of contacting these diseases depend on a lot of
different things, including the number of sexual partners, gender, and what
particular oral sex acts people engage in.
She states, “Many people don’t know that STDs
can be spread orally. Or, if they do, they don’t see the health risks as being
very serious. Oral sex is not safe sex; rather, it’s safer sex, but it’s
definitely not safe sex because most people don’t use protection for oral sex.
However, they should actually be cautious about it too, especially if your
partner has other partners.”
Warren says performing oral sex on a male partner
without a condom is riskier than other forms of oral sex, and stresses the
importance of condom use for a man having oral sex with multiple male
partners.
“If a male is giving oral sex to a woman, I
consider that to be a low-risk exposure; but a woman giving oral sex to a man
with multiple partners is really dangerous. You can’t tell if his partners are
infected. It is just like sex with multiple partners but no penetration,” she
adds.
Another concern that has recently arisen is the
question of catching chlamydia through oral sex.
In May 2011 International conference at
Gateshead, at which Dr Indrajit Ghosh and his colleagues revealed the results of
their screening programme among female commercial sex workers in London.
They found that one in every 25 of these women
had chlamydia in the throat. It seems fairly certain that they had acquired the
germ through offering oral sex to customers.
Additionally, one in every 50 of the female sex
workers had unsuspected gonorrhoea in the throat.
Ghosh says, “This research makes it clear that
oral sex is not quite as safe as it may have seemed – except of course if you
only do it with one partner.”
Oral sex is linked to throat cancer. Cancer? Yes,
you can get throat cancer from oral sex, says American Cancer Society Chief
Medical Officer, Otis Brawley.
Brawley explains, “It’s not oral sex, per se,
that causes cancer, but the human papilloma virus which can be passed from
person to person during sex — including during oral sex — that causes cancer.
Those who have ever performed oral sex have more than doubled their risk of
getting an HPV infection.”
Researchers have found that some cancers of the
oropharynx (the middle of the throat) and tonsils are caused by a certain type
of HPV.
The study, published in The New England
Journal of Medicine, showed a greater risk for oropharyngeal cancer in
people that had oral sex with at least six different partners.
They found out that the DNA signature of HPV Type
16 was often found in the cancers of people who had multiple oral sex
partners.
Brawley says, “Both men and women can have an HPV
infection in the throat. It doesn’t discriminate by gender. The population that
I thought would be least likely to get it was the first population to have this
problem — that is heterosexual men between ages 40 and 50,” he says.
Again, one can get HIV through oral sex. A
research conducted by the San Francisco Aids Organisation found out that many
women contacted HIV from oral sex by swallowing semen.
The study states, “HIV still can enter through
open cuts and sores, or possibly by infecting the lining of the mouth. There are
some documented cases of people getting HIV through their mouth.
“Once semen gets past the mouth, stomach acid and
enzymes in the aesophagus kill the virus. So, swallowing or spitting out semen
reduces your risk for HIV, compared with letting it sit in your mouth.”
However, you don’t have to leave yourself and
your partner unprotected. To reduce your risk for these infections, experts
recommend the use of barrier protection like dental clams or condoms and also
offer some advice.
Brawley says, “Before you two taste each other’s
forbidden fruit, make sure you’re clean. Don’t perform oral for about 45 minutes
after you brush your teeth, floss, or engage in any other aggravating oral
behavior; and not at all when you have open sores.”
But you can be more practical this weekend. Get
yourself and your partner tested for these diseases before engaging in any
sexual activity. And save yourselves the worry.
Remember, the catch is, stay faithful!
Culled from Punch
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