Hi
I am 30. 2 days back, First time I visited to decent Health shop.. I got BBBJ, etc for 15000 JPY, 60 min course, no FS...
Suddenly I am realizing that any way of transmission of diseases due to mouth kiss and BBBJ....
Kindly advise, should I need to go and check the doctor. Or I can trust that I visited the decent health shop, no worries about transmission...
Pls advise
You'll find lots of posts from folks on the thread with similar questions. You will also read many of their opinions, some spot on, others not so.
Here's a post from a specialist:
H. Hunter Handsfield, M.D.
Directly to the questions.
1) Gonorrhea and fellatio: In general, penile exposure to a partner's mouth is low risk for STD (much lower than vaginal or anal sex), but of the STDs that are seen, gonorrhea is among the most common. There are no data to estimate the numerical risk, but the large majority of exposures don't result in gonorrhea transmisison, even if the oral partner has gonorrhea of the throat. And gonorrhea is uncommon in heterosexual women. These factors translate to a very low risk for any particular exposure of the sort you describe, probably only one chance in several thousand.
2) Urethral gonorrhea without symptoms is rare. If you weren't discharging pus from your penis by 7 days, almost certainly you weren't infected and didn't need testing. In any case, testing at 7 days is fine. It takes only 2-3 days for gonorrhea tests to be positive.
3) That dose of amoxicillin probably would cure 80-90% of gonorrhea cases. About 10-20% of gonorrhea bacteria in North America are totally resistant to all drugs of the penicillin class (which includes amoxicillin).
4) Transmission efficiency: It undoubtedly has to do with the how many bacteria are present in the throat of infected people, the fact that saliva inhibits many bacteria, and that in most episodes of oral sex, the amount of oral secretions that get into the urethra is small. But this is just common sense, not data. No research has been done and I don't expect ever will be done on such an arcane issue.
5) If you search the medical literature, you will find that I was the investigator who first pointed out the very existance of asymptomatic urethral gonorrhea in men, 35 years ago. At the time, it appeared that up to 10% of urethral infections stayed asymptomatc. However, we now know that some gonorrhea strains are more likely than others to result in infection without symptoms. For a variety of reasons, those particular strains currently are rare in almost all parts of the world. Today, most likely at least 99% of urethral gonorrhea infections result in symptoms, although sometimes they can be mild.
You've got it right about HIV and syphilis, although testing for those still would be warranted in some settings involving oral-genital exposure, such as in men who have sex with men and in parts of the world where those infections are more common than in Europe and North America.
https://www.medhelp.org/posts/STDs/Oral-Sex-Clarifications-and-more-/show/516654
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