There's an STI That You Probably Don't Know About — and It's Not Entirely Uncommon
Here's a fun little kernel of news to brighten up (and/or
slightly dampen) your Thursday afternoon: There's a new sexually
transmitted infection in town! And it could be more common than we
realize.
The infection is called Mycoplasma genitalium (or MG for short), and its symptoms may include genital discharge, pain while urinating, pelvic pain and for women, bleeding after sex. Although it was first identified back in the 1980s, according to a new report in
the International Journal of Epidemiology, it hasn't really been
epidemiologically studied at length, which means that its transmission,
risk factors and prevalence have always been shrouded in a certain
degree of mystery — that is, doctors weren't certain how it got around.
That is, until now. According to the International Journal
of Epidemiology report, MG is, in all likelihood, a sexually transmitted
infection.
The study: Lead author Pam Sonnenberg and her
research team pulled their data from the urine samples of a group
of 4,507 British participants who ranged in age from 16 to 44 and had
varying levels of sexual activity. The team found
that MG was most prevalent in participants who had engaged with more
than four partners in the previous year, with 5.2% of those men and 3.1%
of those women testing positive for the infection.
Meanwhile, the infection was nowhere to be found in more
than 200 participants who were aged 16 and 17 and had never had vaginal,
anal or oral sex.
The authors wrote that all of this "strengthens evidence
that MG is an STI: There were strong associations with risky sexual
behaviors, with behavioral risk factors similar to those in other known
STIs, and no infections were detected in those reporting no previous
sexual experience."
They also found that while the aforementioned symptoms are
all possible, a lot of people with the infection were asymptomatic. "In
men there were no associations between reported STI symptoms and MG
positivity," the study says. But they did add that "although
asymptomatic infection was common, we found a strong association with
post-coital bleeding in women."
So basically, MG likes to take the low-key route and just
chill in our bodies without causing too much of a scene, except for when
it randomly decides to make your V bleed after sex. Cute.
So should we all be freaking out right now, or what? As is the case with most any STI, the answer is no.
"I think we don't need to panic about it," Zhana Vrangalova, a sex researcher who teaches at New York University, told Mic. "As
a bacterial infection, [MG] is prevented in the same ways that
gonorrhea and chlamydia are: by using condoms properly and
consistently."
Vrangalova added that the results of this study aren't exactly shocking. She noted that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have
already acknowledged the possibility that MG is a sexually transmitted
infection, "and this study's results are consistent with that
conclusion."
Still, it's not something you should be super cavalier
about, either — especially if you're experiencing symptoms consistent
with urethritis or cervicitis (inflammations of the urethra or cervix, which are signified by discharges or burning sensations or pain while peeing).
"This should be something to consider when people present
with current or persistent urethritis or cervicitis but don't test
positive for either gonorrhea or chlamydia," she said. "MG is relatively
uncommon, but it is not as uncommon as it is unknown among laypeople
and forgotten about by medical professionals."
In short, MG might very well be a thing — but that doesn't
mean it's worth freaking out about. As Vrangalova noted, "This is just
one more reason for people to have safer sex."
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