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How your sexual activity affects partner's health
Sydney, May 3
Researchers have discovered an
association between sexual activity and a disease that results in
women's painful periods, pelvic pain and difficulty in conceiving.
The
study found a link between contact with seminal fluid and the
development of endometriosis, affects about 10 percent women in the
reproductive age.
"In laboratory studies, our research found that
seminal fluid (a major component of semen) enhances the survival and
growth of endometriosis lesions," said co-lead author Jonathan McGuane
from the University of Adelaide in Australia.
Endometriosis -- a
condition when tissue that normally grows inside a women's uterus grows
outside the uterus -- affects one in ten reproductive-aged women.
The
condition's symptoms vary but include painful periods, pelvic pain, and
women with endometriosis may have difficulty conceiving, associate
professor Louise Hull from the University of Adelaide, pointed out.
"This
is an important finding and raises the possibility that exposure of the
endometrium (the inner lining of the uterus) to seminal fluid may
contribute to the progression of the disease in women," she noted.
The
researchers said more study is needed to uncover what this means for
the relationship between endometriosis and sexual activity.
"We
now need to apply these laboratory findings to real life and determine
whether the exposure of seminal fluid that occurs naturally during
intercourse puts women at increased risk of developing endometriosis.
And if modifications to sexual activity could lower the severity of the
disease in women with endometriosis," Hull said.
The research was published in the American Journal of Pathology.