
For some cases of bacterial vaginosis, treatment should include a package deal, doctors now say.
The American College of Obstetricians & Gynecologists (ACOG) updated its clinical guidance Friday to fit with recent data indicating that treatment for recurring bacterial vaginosis (BV) in women is significantly more effective if their male partners are also treated at the same timeโwith both an oral antibiotic and an antibiotic cream directly onto the potentially offending member.
โPartner therapy offers us another avenue for hopefully preventing recurrence and helping people feel better faster,โ Christopher Zahn, chief of clinical practice and health equity and quality at ACOG, said in a statement.
BV is a common condition affecting nearly 30 percent of women worldwide. Still, itโs potentially stigmatizing and embarrassing, with symptoms including itching, burning, a concerning fishy smell, and vaginal discharge that can be green or gray. With symptoms like this, BV is often described as an infectionโbut itโs actually not. BV is an imbalance in the normal bacterial communities that inhabit the vaginaโa situation called dysbiosis.
This imbalance can be especially difficult to correct; of the women who suffer with BV, up to 66 percent will end up having the condition recur after treatment.
BV symptoms are โincredibly uncomfortable and disrupt peopleโs daily lives,โ Zahn said, and that discomfort โbecomes compounded by frustration when this condition comes back repeatedly.โ
Firm recommendation
Studies in recent years have started to expose the reasons behind recurrence. Though again, BV is an imbalance, it has the profile of a sexually transmitted infection, with links to new sexual partners and similar incubation periods. Going further, microbial communities of penises can silently harbor the bacterial species linked to BV, and penile microbial communities can be predictive of BV risk in partners.
Source link
#Vaginal #condition #treatment #update #Men #treated

























