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STDs  (Expert Forum)
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Are all infections considered STD's?
Answered by
University of Washington Seattle - WA
This forum does not cover AIDS/HIV issues. This forum is for questions and support regarding STD issues such as: Chlamydia, Crabs (pubic lice scabies), Gonorrhea, Hepatitis (viral), Herpes, HPV, Molluscum Contagiosum, PID, Rectal Infections, Syphilis, Trichomonas, Warts, Yeast Infection.

IMPORTANT

This forum is limited to questions about STDs other than HIV/AIDS. For questions about HIV prevention, or if you have general questions about safe sex (e.g., condoms, how to protect yourself from HIV and STDs), please visit the HIV Prevention and Safe Sex Forum

Some of the most common types of questions concern the risk of HIV or STD after a particular sexual exposure, and about symptoms that might or might not be due to HIV. If your question is along these lines, please visit the HIV Prevention and Safe Sex Forum.

Are all infections considered STD's?

by inquiry3, Oct 16, 2004 12:00AM
I recently got a yeast infection, is this considered a sexually transmitted disease?  All information about yeast infections are inconclusive as to their origins.  Also If I have been having unprotected sex with my partner does he need to be treated as well, and how do they treat a yeast infection in a male?

by H. Hunter Handsfield, M.D., Oct 17, 2004 12:00AM
No, yeast infections are not sexually transmitted, with rare exceptions.  Yeast is a kind of fungus. Various species of yeasts/fungi (e.g., Candida and others) are normally present on and around various parts of the body, including the rectum and vagina; most women carry yeasts some of the time and in some women they are always present.  In other words, when a "yeast infection" occurs, it isn't that the yeast has newly arrived; it has been there all the time.  The reasons yeasts grow to larger amoungs, or that your body reacts to them with irritation, are quite varied and often aren't known--although hormonal fluctuations, changes in other bacteria in the vagina (e.g., after antibiotic therapy for another infection).



Having said all that, there are exceptions.  Occasionally a man may get a penile yeast infection by exposure to a woman with vaginal yeast; and on very rare occasion, a woman may acquire infection from a male partner.



I hope this helps.  Regards--   HHH, MD
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