Incurable gonorrhea: The looming worldwide epidemic

rockin'robin

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Gonorrhea is a common and — until now— easily treatable sexually transmitted disease. But it could be entering a dangerous new phase
Prepare to worry about yet another super bug. The World Health Organization is warning governments and doctors to be on the lookout for a drug-resistant strain of gonorrhea, the world's second most common sexually transmitted disease. Are we in the early stage of the next big public health crisis? Here, a brief guide:

What exactly is gonorrhea?
It's a bacterial infection commonly spread through any kind of sexual contact. Untreated, it can cause reactions ranging from painful urination to spontaneous abortion, and increase the risk of contracting HIV. Babies born to infected women have a 50-50 chance of developing eye infections that can leave them blind.

How common is it?
It's the most common sexually transmitted disease after chlamydia. Globally, more than 106 million people are infected each year, including more than 700,000 in the U.S. Exact numbers are hard to pin down, however, as an estimated half of the cases are never reported, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Gonorrhea has long been considered "low on the sexual risk register" because, unlike HIV or herpes, doctors have been able to knock it out easily with antibiotics. But that could soon change.

What has changed?
The bacteria mutated to ensure its survival. In 2008, doctors reported finding a strain of gonorrhea in Japan that was resistant to antibiotics. Researchers warned the newly discovered superbug could spread and become a global health threat. Since then, antibiotic-resistant gonorrhea has been diagnosed in several other countries, including Australia, France, Norway, Sweden, and Great Britain. Doctors can usually beat a stubborn case of gonorrhea with a group of antibiotics called cephalosporins, but the superbug can withstand even this last resort treatment. "This organism has basically been developing resistance against every medication we've thrown at it," said Dr. Manjula Lusti-Narasimhan, a WHO scientist.

SEE ALSO: Coming soon: An over-the-counter HIV test?

Can't anything stop it?
WHO has put together a "global action plan" focusing first on shaking doctors and governments out of their complacency. Gonorrhea, known colloquially as the clap, was once "considered the scourge of sailors and soldiers," says Frank Jordans of The Associated Press. Then along came penicillin, and suddenly it was easily treatable, and easily forgotten. To keep the new strain from galloping across the globe, doctors will have to step up efforts to spot gonorrhea. That, along with better sex education and a renewed push to find alternative treatments will be needed to avert a truly dangerous crisis, says Lusti-Narasimhan. "We're not going to be able to get rid of it completely," she says. "But we can limit the spread."

Incurable gonorrhea: The looming worldwide epidemic - Yahoo! News
 
cross legs more often,problem solved failing that use condom
 
This is interesting... I'm approaching this from a Natural Hygiene perspective.

From wikipedia...

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"Neisseria are fastidious Gram-negative cocci that require nutrient supplementation to grow in laboratory cultures. Specifically, they grow on chocolate agar with carbon dioxide. These cocci are facultatively intracellular and typically appear in pairs (diplococci), in the shape of coffee beans. Of the eleven species of Neisseria that colonize humans, only two are pathogens. N. gonorrhoeae is the causative agent of gonorrhea (also called "The Clap," which is derived from the French word "clapier," meaning "brothel") and is transmitted via sexual contact.[2]

"Neisseria is usually isolated on Thayer-Martin agar (or VPN agar)—an agar plate containing antibiotics (Vancomycin, Colistin, Nystatin, and SXT) and nutrients that facilitate the growth of Neisseria species while inhibiting the growth of contaminating bacteria and fungi.Further testing to differentiate the species includes testing for oxidase (all clinically relevant Neisseria show a positive reaction) and the carbohydrates maltose, sucrose, and glucose test in which N. gonorrhoeae will only oxidize (that is, utilize) the glucose."
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This tells me a few things. One, they are fastidious, meaning they have a complex nutritional requirement to survive. Notice that the test is the chocolate agar with carbon dioxide test. That does not mean chocolate as in "chocolate bars," but rather the color of the medium the organisms are cultured in for STD testing. The other thing is that these organisms will only utilize glucose as part of its nutritional requirements.

This is interesting because there is a way to starve these organisms of their fuel or food supply. I don't suppose these people have ever tried water fasting to clean out the bodies, inside (not just the GI tract - that's considered OUTSIDE the body even though it's inside our bodies).

See, it appears to be that these organisms require a compromised human host to thrive inside. This could include among other things affected blood supply with higher than normal carbon dioxide and certainly high glucose levels that usually stay elevated for long periods of time, giving optimal conditions for the organisms get out of hand. This could happen in diabetics or people with high fat diets, especially with animal products. Remember, a sufficiently high fat dietary can contribute to the phenomenon of insulin not being able to bind to the glucose in the presence of fats in the blood stream prior to transporting through the artery walls into the tissues (cells) that need the glucose as fuel. In this case, the organisms might be feasting on high glucose levels as one of its requirements.

If you go on a fast, a water fast specifically, you will flush out a lot of waste material that is fuel for these organisms and other related organisms (such as the bacterium of clamydia), reduce the carbon dioxide levels in the blood stream as well as the glucose levels (especially if they had not gone down to fasting levels in decades in the case of undiagnosed diabetics caught in car crashes or collapsing somewhere in an incoherent state).

Now, this does not mean that once you have cleaned out your body, that you can return to your "modern American ways" and all is good to go. It mentions in there a propensity for reinfection once you have been infected before (of course, if you reinstate the conditions needed for the organisms to thrive).

Though you won't die from this disease, it does make for misery... Perhaps people will finally hit a wall and admit that it's time to clean up their dietary habits greatly to minimize these problems, but this is usually the last thing people tried if they have tried everything else. Failing that, much of the developed world may drastically slow down their population growth or suffer the consequences.
 
Scary!

Just the other night, I used google image to see what herpes look like.. all I can say is YIIIIIIKES!!! They say herpes not easily treatable?
 
Haven't high school students been getting educated about STD's? I thought everyone knew how gross, long term, and terrible these diseases are. (In my youth, they were called venereal diseases, and we were terrified of them.)
 
i think you could die from it, possible pelvic inflamtary disease cause adhsions bowel obstruction.still that was intresting the natural way with fast and water
 
Haven't high school students been getting educated about STD's? I thought everyone knew how gross, long term, and terrible these diseases are. (In my youth, they were called venereal diseases, and we were terrified of them.)

I hardly remember what I learned in HS. :giggle: I studied genital herpes and it's not cured. :lol: It is common and highly contagious.:Ohno:

P.S. Im sure deaf people suffer somewhat memory loss just b/c of bad ears..words do not stick to your brain, know what I mean?
 
its probably been secretly engineered like they did with AIDS...this time they Want to slow down the global population bomb...and it easier to spread than AIDS did...
 
I hardly remember what I learned in HS. :giggle: I studied genital herpes and it's not cured. :lol: It is common and highly contagious.:Ohno:

P.S. Im sure deaf people suffer somewhat memory loss just b/c of bad ears..words do not stick to your brain, know what I mean?
Maybe. But the pictures and videos of STD's certainly should have "stuck."
 
better yet they should print it out on condom packets like they do for lung cancers on smokes....
 
Maybe. But the pictures and videos of STD's certainly should have "stuck."

There was one class in junior high and I don't remember any pictures or videos there. Hardly remember anything from that class, except an anatomical discussion of genitals and a reminder to use condoms. Sex Ed was/is very controversial, so a lot of parents didn't want a "real" sex ed class.
 
Oh wow, it looks like I don't want sex with anyone because of not want deal with incurable gonorrhea. :ugh:

I had sex education when I was started in middle school and they did exactly explained about STD.
 
There was one class in junior high and I don't remember any pictures or videos there. Hardly remember anything from that class, except an anatomical discussion of genitals and a reminder to use condoms. Sex Ed was/is very controversial, so a lot of parents didn't want a "real" sex ed class.

Yup, that's correct and not many parent teach them about situation with sex so left children in greater risk. The school should have ahead to cover anything that need to educate our child.
 
The best way for the parents to teach the kids about sex. Dont be afraid to talk with about it. I have two kids on my own. My kids is smart and knows what happening here. Scott
 
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