Monday, 10 November 2014

Sidddha Treatment For AIDS & Sexual Diseases

STD-Syphilis & AIDS

MEGHANOI- Sexually transmitted diseases & AIDS
Sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) are infections that can be transferred from one person to another through any type of sexual contact. Sexual contact includes kissing, oral-genital contact, vaginal and anal intercourse. The infection can be transmitted from contact with the ulcer which teems with spirochetes. Similarly, if the ulcer is in the mouth, merely kissing the infected individual can spread the infection.
SYPHILIS:
Syphilis is a sexually transmitted disease (STD) that has been around for centuries and is usually spread during sexual contact, including kissing or oral sex. Syphilis is an infection that is caused by a microscopic organism called Treponema pallidum. The disease can go through three active stages and a latent (inactive) stage.
Primary stage of syphilis, a painless ulcer (the chancre) appears in a sexually-exposed area, such as the penis, mouth, or anal region. Sometimes, multiple ulcers may be present. Painless, swollen glands (lymph nodes) are often present in the region of the chancre, such as in the groin of patients with penile lesions. The ulcer can go away on its own after 3 to 6 weeks, only for the disease to recur months later as secondary syphilis if the primary stage is not treated.
Secondary syphilis is a systemic stage of the disease, meaning that it can involve various organ systems of the body. In this stage, therefore, patients can initially develop a skin rash that does not itch. Sometimes the skin rash of secondary syphilis is very faint and hard to recognize; it may not even be noticed in all cases. In addition, secondary syphilis can involve virtually any part of the body, causing, for example, swollen glands (lymph nodes) in the groin, neck, and arm pits, arthritis, kidney problems, and liver abnormalities. Subsequent to secondary syphilis, some patients will continue to carry the infection in their body without symptoms. This is the so-called latent stage of the infection. Then, with or without a latent stage, which can last as long as twenty or more years, the third (tertiary) stage of the disease can develop.

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