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Target Concepts:
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Query: EC:2.7.10.2 (
focal adhesion kinase
)
44,029
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Recent studies indicate that tonsillar gonococcal infection or colonization is fairly common. Carriage rates of about 8% have been found. These studies also indicate that oro-genital contacts are common. Since very little is known about the amount of oral microbiota transmitted to the genitals, we have studied the occurrence of oral streptococci and Neisseria species in
urethra
and cervix. Among 128 patients attending an
STD
-clinic we found 10 carriers of oral streptococci, one Streptococcus mitior, four Streptococcus sanguis, one Streptococcus mutans and four Streptococcus salivarius and case of urethritis due to Neisseria menigitidis. Seventy-three of the patients had recently had their genitals exposed to the oral flora of their partners. Despite the heavy contamination with oral microbiota that can be assumed to occur in these cases, there seems to be no colonization of the genitals with oral microbiota.
...
PMID:Genital occurrence of oral microbiota. 8 32
1. We studied the non-adrenergic, non-cholinergic (NANC) nerve-mediated relaxation induced by electrical stimulation in pig isolated lower urinary tract smooth muscle, and the possible involvement of the L-arginine (L-ARG)/nitric oxide (NO) pathway in this response. 2. Trigonal strips, precontracted by noradrenaline (NA), carbachol or endothelin-1 (ET-1), relaxed frequency-dependently in response to electrical stimulation. Maximum relaxation was obtained at 6-8 Hz, and amounted to 56 +/- 2%, 77 +/- 3% and 62 +/- 6% of the agonist-induced tension in preparations contracted by NA, carbachol, or ET-1, respectively. Exposure to NG-nitro-L-arginine (L-NOARG; 10(-7)-10(-5) M) concentration-dependently reduced the relaxant response in preparations contracted by NA. L-NOARG (10(-6) M) reduced the maximal response to 51 +/- 8% of control. L-NOARG (10(-5) M) abolished all relaxation, and unmasked a contractile component; D-NOARG had no effect. Also in trigonal preparations, where the tension had been raised by carbachol or ET-1, L-NOARG (10(-5) M) markedly reduced relaxations evoked by electrical stimulation. 3. In trigonal preparations contracted by NA, maximal relaxation was increased after pretreatment with L-
ARG
(10(-3) M), and the inhibitory effect of L-NOARG (10(-6) M) was prevented. Incubation of the trigonal strips with methylene blue had no effect on relaxations elicited at frequencies less than 6 Hz, but a small inhibition was observed at higher frequencies. 4. Administration of NO (present in acidified solution of NaNO2) induced concentration-dependent relaxations in trigonal preparations contracted by NA, carbachol, or ET-1.L-NOARG (10-5 M) and L-
ARG
(10-3M) had no effect on these relaxations. However, methylene blue (10-S M) significantly shifted the concentration-response curve for NO to the right. NANC-relaxation and NO-induced relaxation of trigonal preparations were both inhibited by oxyhaemoglobin (10-5 M) and pyrogallol (10-4 M).5. In urethral preparations precontracted by NA, electrical stimulation caused frequency-dependent relaxations. A maximum relaxation of 73 +/- 4% was obtained at 10 Hz. Also in the
urethra
, NANCrelaxation was blocked by L-NOARG (10-5 M), and a contractile response generally appeared.6. Detrusor strips treated with alpha-beta methylene ATP (10-i M) and atropine (10-6 M), and then contracted by ET-1, showed relaxations (19 +/- 3% of the induced tension) in response to electrical field stimulation (2-20 Hz) only when the tension was high. No response at all, or small contractions, were found in response to electrical stimulation in K+ (35 mM)-contracted detrusor strips. Detrusor preparations contracted by carbachol were concentration-dependently relaxed by exogenously administered NO, SIN-1 (NO-donor), and isoprenaline, whereas vasoactive intestinal polypeptide had minor effects. NO and SIN-1 induced maximal relaxations of 63 +/- 3% and 70 +/- 4%, respectively, of the tension induced by carbachol. Isoprenaline produced an almost complete relaxation (96 +/- 4%).7. The results suggest that NANC-nerve mediated relaxation, involving the L-
ARG
/NO pathway, can be demonstrated consistently in the pig trigonal and urethral, but not in detrusor smooth muscle. The importance of this pathway for lower urinary tract physiology and pathophysiology remains to be established.
...
PMID:Nitric oxide and relaxation of pig lower urinary tract. 139 68
One hundred and five heterosexual men without evidence of clinical anogenital warts and attending a genitourinary medicine clinic were studied. Three separate specimens for cytology were taken from (i) the distal
urethra
including the perimeatal area, (ii) the penile shaft and glans penis including the sub-preputial area, and (iii) from the anorectal area using a proctoscope. Pooled specimens of exfoliated cells from these sites were also taken for the detection of human papillomavirus (HPV) by DNA hybridization. Twenty-eight (27%) of the men had cytological evidence suggestive of HPV infection. HPV genome was detected in 21 (20%) of the men by DNA hybridization and 95% of them were carrying HPV 16 genotype either alone or in combination with other genotypes. A total of 42 (40%) of patients had evidence of occult HPV infection using cytology and/or DNA hybridization techniques collectively. None of the epidemiological risk factors were significantly associated with occult HPV infection in this study. The significance of this high incidence of sexually transmissible HPV genomes, mostly HPV16 in the anogenital area of heterosexual men attending genitourinary medicine clinics requires further study.
Int J
STD
AIDS
PMID:Prevalence of occult human papillomavirus infection, determined by cytology and DNA hybridization, in heterosexual men attending a genitourinary medicine clinic. 165 14
A polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was used to demonstrate the presence or absence of Mycoplasma genitalium in the lower genital tract of 57 women who attended a sexually transmitted diseases clinic. The mycoplasma was detected in the cervix of 10 (17.5%) women and also in the vagina of 4 (16%) and the
urethra
of 6 (24%) of 25 women from whom multiple samples were obtained. Chlamydia trachomatis was detected also by a PCR in 9 (16%) of the women, but only 3 were chlamydia-positive and mycoplasma-positive. M. genitalium was detected occasionally in women with vaginal disease (for example, bacterial vaginosis), whereas C. trachomatis was not, but whether there is any causal relationship between the mycoplasma and vaginal or cervical disease requires further study.
Int J
STD
AIDS
PMID:Detection of Mycoplasma genitalium in the genitourinary tract of women by the polymerase chain reaction. 191 58
In a retrospective clinical audit of patient records to determine the value of examining the sexual partners of women with initial genital herpes, it was evident that only the regular partners attended for screening. Twenty-six per cent of women with initial genital herpes and 19% of male partners had some form of other lower genital tract infection. Of 164 male partners of women with initial genital herpes, 30 (18.3%) also suffered from initial genital herpes at the same time, 22 (13.4%) gave a history of, or had signs consistent with, recurrent genital herpes, and 3 (1.8%) asymptomatic male partners without a previous history of genital ulceration had herpes simplex virus isolated from the
urethra
on routine screening.
Int J
STD
AIDS
PMID:Value of examining the sexual partners of women suffering from initial genital herpes. 195 23
The authors determined the prevalence of genital Chlamydia trachomatis infection in women who visited a clinic for sexually transmitted diseases (STDS) and the influences of the number of partners and of the use of oral contraceptives (OCs), with special attention paid to the recognition of pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) and to the results of therapy. Of 217 women with a mean age of 26 years (range 14-56), who visited the
STD
clinic of the University Hospital of Groningen from July 1985-November 1987, anamnestic data were collected as well as the results from swabs of the cervix and
urethra
taken for culture and direct immunofluorescence (IF) test of C. trachomatis and for gonococcal culture. The influence of the number of partners (1 vs 1) and OCs on the prevalence of C. trachomatis infection was evaluated by logistic regression analysis. PID was excluded in cooperation with the department of gynecology. C. trachomatis-infected women were treated by doxycycline orally (day 1, 2x 100 mg, days 2-7, 1x 100 mg) according to the dosage scheme advised by the Dutch Health Council in 1986. A control culture was taken 2-3 weeks after treatment. C. trachomatis was detected in 72/217 (33%) of the women by culture and/or direct IF test and in 22/41 (54%) women with gonorrhea. In connection with the number of partners in the year preceding the examination, the following prevalences were found: 18/74 (24%, 1 partner), 43/108 (40%, 2-5 partners), and 10/27 (5 partners). The prevalence among OC-using women was significantly higher (p0.05) than in non-OC using women: 44.101 (44%) vs 21/93 (23%). This was also true when OC users were compared to sterilized women (9/47, 19%), regardless of number of partners and age. Active PID was found in 2 women, both infected. After treatment with positive C. trachomatis cultures, control cultures were negative in 39/40 (98%). A relatively high prevalence of genital C. trachomatis infection is found in women visiting
STD
clinics, as well as in women with only 1 partner during the year preceding the examination. This study supports the hypothesis of OC use being a risk factor. How OC use influences PID risk is not fully understood. Within the framework of reliable contraception and prevention of
STD
complications, the combination of OC + a barrier method should be advised to women without a steady partner. Further study is necessary to determine whether preventive antibiotic treatment of asymptomatic adolescents with anamnestic risk factors for C. trachomatis infection is indicated at the start of a new relationship. (author's modified)
...
PMID:[Chlamydia trachomatis infection in women and the use of oral contraceptives]. 200 20
The case notes of 1080 men with genital warts were analysed retrospectively over a 30-month period. One hundred and forty patients were identified with intrameatal warts and an audit of their treatment is discussed. When electrocautery and cryotherapy were compared the former produced a more rapid resolution of the lesions. Cystourethroscopy was performed on 16 patients with intrameatal warts. No patient had involvement beyond the distal 3 cm of the
urethra
. Data on concurrent sexually transmitted diseases, population characteristics and pattern of referral are presented and compared to previously reported studies.
Int J
STD
AIDS 1990 Jul
PMID:Management of intrameatal warts in men. 210 89
Ureaplasma urealyticum is one of the microorganisms possibly causing nongonococcal urethritis. In a prospective study, 606 men without urethritis presented to an
STD
clinic in a rural West German region were investigated for the prevalence of U. urealyticum in the
urethra
. The overall isolation rate of the organism was 21.3%. Analyzing patients grouped by clinical diagnoses, the isolation rate of U. urealyticum was significantly higher in the genital warts group (25%) and in the partner's control group (35%) than in the group of patients suffering from fertility disorder (15.2%) or balanitis (14%). These findings stress the importance and the difficulty to select the appropriate controls in clinical studies concerning the role of U. urealyticum in the male
urethra
.
...
PMID:Prevalence of Ureaplasma urealyticum in the urethra of men without urethritis in relation to clinical diagnosis. 231 99
Whilst some viruses of the Papilloma family cause warts on the skin, others infect mucosal cells. The types called 6 and 11 produce benign papillomas, called condylomata acuminata, visible to the naked eye, not only on the vulva, vagina, penis (cockscomb), but also in the anus, and occasionally the larynx, mouth (tongue) and oesophagus. Types 16 and 18 cause cervical cancer (generally called in situ) and especially very small flat lesions that can only be seen through the colposcope in women and a lens in men. These flat micro-lesions can also be found on the vulva, vaginal walls and on the glans and, balano-preputial area and shaft in males, the distal
urethra
, anus, larynx (especially the vocal cords), the mouth and oesophagus. These flat micro-lesions are either early cancers (here the deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) of the virus 16 and/or 18 is integrated into the cell genome), or precancerous lesion in which case the viral DNA is not integrated. Their malignant transformation is much more frequent at the junction of the glandular and squamous parts of the cervix, than in the vulva or vagina. Co-carcinogenic factors appear to have an important role in the malignant transformation;--as for instance sexually transmissible infections including chlamydiae, bacteria that produce carcinogens such as nitrosamines, herpes virus which is known to cause mutations predisposing to the integration of the Papova viruses, chemical substances applied to the genitalia. The role of low hygiene standards in male sexual partners is the major cause (such men can carry simultaneously several sexually transmissible diseases (
STD
], who are never examined in search for flat lesions, who do not seek medical advice and have multiple sexual contacts with many women among whom some are more dangerous than prostitutes, especially since the wide use of hormone contraceptives and abortion that has multiplied the incidence of cervical cancer by 3 among the 20 year-old females, by 4 among the 25 year-old ones and by 2.5 among the 30 year-old ones, between 1961-65 and 1982-83. These changes in contraception have now made intra-vaginal ejaculation the rule (this not only carries viruses and other micro-organisms into the female genital tract, but also deposits sperm that contains some thirty factors that suppress local immunity). This with the rise of multiple partners, early sexual activity in particular in girls (hardly post-puberty) explains the increase of the frequency of cervical cancer in younger and younger women.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Prevention of genito-anal and bucco-laryngo-esophageal cancers caused by sexually transmitted viruses]. 300 11
In 589 males, 169 with and 420 without urethritis, urethral swabs were taken and assessed semiquantitatively for the sexually transmittable infectious agents Neisseria gonorrhoeae, Chlamydia trachomatis, Ureaplasma urealyticum, Mycoplasma hominis, Trichomonas vaginalis and Candida species. The organisms were isolated in patients with and without urethritis as follows: N. gonorrhoeae with urethritis 19.5%, without 0.0%; C. trachomatis with urethritis 16.0%, without 2.9%; U. urealyticum (high cfu-counts) with urethritis 27.2%, without 11.7%; M. hominis (high cfu) with 4.7%, without 2.9%. Combined infections were more frequent in males with urethritis (20.8%) than in those without (5.4%). None of the investigated pathogenic microorganisms could be demonstrated in 37.9% of males with and in 71.2% of males without urethritis. Using loglinear analysis, a significant coincidence of infections with N. gonorrhoeae and U. urealyticum and of infections with U. urealyticum and M. hominis was found. It is concluded that an asymptomatic infection of the male
urethra
with sexually transmittable organisms is to be expected in partner's control examinations and in patients presenting for other
STD
like venereal warts or genital herpes. Therefore in these men, even if they are asymptomatic, a comprehensive microbiological examination is strongly recommended.
...
PMID:Sexually transmittable organisms in the urethra of males with and without urethritis. 311 95
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