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This edition of the alt.sex FAQs was written in the early part
of 1994 by the last Alt.sex FAQ Committee.  They reflect the
best wisdom and knowledge of all the participants on
the committee at that time.
 
Since those days, however, alt.sex has been overrun by
advertising spam of such unbelievable volume that nobody asks
questions anymore.  There are no "frequently asked questions"
on the newsgroup and maintaining an FAQ for it, especially
one of the considerable quality found here, is simply not
worthwhile or even honest. 
 
Consider this a historical document.  It reflects
alt.sex as it existed in its finest, most golden years.
Some sections will never be out of date; it's hard to imagine
good advice on oral sex or virginity or even buying a great sex
toy ever going out of style.  Anatomy doesn't change although
our understanding of it might.  Some sections, however, are
dreadfully out of date; The sections on Sexually Transmitted
Diseases, Legal Issues, even Terms and Acronyms have fallen
far behind the times.  For lists of current resources, 
Yahoo might be a better place to start. 
  
If you think you have an STD go to your
doctor and get a diagnosis as early as possible.  Most common sexually
transmitted diseases can be cured.  This FAQ is not meant to
displace sound medical advice from a licensed physician. 
- Full name:
 - Human Immunodeficiency Virus / Acquired ImmunoDeficiency 
Syndrome.  It is important to distinguish between the two.  
HIV is the virus that ultimately causes AIDS.  AIDS is a 
syndrome, a collection of symptoms associated with HIV 
infection.
  - Symptoms:
 - People infected with HIV may have no symptoms for up to 
fifteen years.  During this time, they are capable of 
infecting anyone they have sex with or donate blood to.  
Initial symptoms of HIV infection include inexplicable 
weight loss, persistent fever, swollen lymph nodes, and 
reddish spots on the skin (Karposi's Sarcoma).
HIV causes the destruction of the immune system.  It's most 
pronounced symptoms, therefore, are opportunistic infections 
of pneumocystis carinii, fungal infections, tuberculosis, 
and various herpes forms.  
  - Treatment:
 - There is no cure for HIV / AIDS.  Right now most scientists 
agree that if you are infected with HIV, you will eventually 
die of AIDS.  Treatment may fend off infections, however the 
typical course is for one overwhelming infection to follow 
another until the victim succumbs.  Various drugs may slow 
the virus, but right now there is no cure.
  - Transmission:
 - In a person infected with HIV, the virus can be present in 
the body's semen, blood, and breast milk. It can also be 
present, in much smaller quantities, in vaginal secretion, 
saliva, and tears.
 - The AIDS virus can be transmitted via any of these fluids, 
but only the first two -- semen and blood -- are likely to 
be involved. Anal sex is the most commonly perceived method 
of transfer, but vaginal sex has been repeatedly shown to 
transmit HIV. Men are less likely than women to be infected 
through vaginal sex, but there are recorded cases of men 
having been infected this way. Cunnilingus and fellatio have 
also been established as capable of transmitting the virus. 
Sexual activities, not sexual orientation, transmit the 
virus.
 - HIV cannot be passed on through casual contact, hugging, 
hand-shaking, touching the sweat of an infected person, or 
mosquito bites.
    - Testing:
 - The HIV test shows the presence of antibodies to HIV. It 
does not show the presence of the virus: the body first has 
to develop antibodies, which normally takes about six weeks. 
Hence, a positive result means that someone has antibodies 
and could possibly develop AIDS in the future. A negative 
result means that someone does not have antibodies at the 
moment. If there is a reason to think that exposure was 
more recent than six weeks, then a test taken immediately 
can only serve as a baseline to compare against a test taken 
later. Within six months of HIV infection, 99% of the 
population will test positive. No one should be tested for 
HIV without first obtaining counselling and ensuring 
beforehand support from his or her family or 
friends.
  - The following numbers may be of use:
  - AIDS Hotline                            (800) 342-2437
- AIDS Information Clearing House         (800) 458-5231 9-7 EST
- CDC AIDS Ethnicity, Age recording       (404) 330-3020
- CDC AIDS Transmission mode recording    (404) 330-3021
- CDC AIDS Top 10, Projections recording  (404) 330-3022
      
 
- Male Symptoms:
 - Yellowish discharge from the penis. Painful, frequent 
urination. Symptoms develop from two to thirty days after 
infection. Roughly 20% of infected men have no symptoms.  
Later stages of the infection may move into the prostate, 
seminal vesicles, and epididymis, causing severe pain and 
fever.  Rare cases can lead to septic arthritis.  Untreated, 
gonorrhea can lead to sterility.
  - Female Symptoms:
 - Under half of women with gonorrhea show no symptoms, or 
symptoms so mild they are commonly ignored. Early symptoms 
include increased vaginal discharge, irritation of the 
external genitals, pain or burning on urination and abnormal 
menstrual bleeding. Women who are untreated may develop 
severe complications. The infection will usually spread to 
the uterus, Fallopian tubes, and ovaries, causing Pelvic 
Inflammatory Disease (PID). PID, though not only caused by 
gonorrhea, is the most common cause of female infertility. 
Early symptoms of PID are lower abdominal pain, fever, 
nausea, vomiting, and pain during intercourse.
  - Treatment:
 - Gonorrhea is a bacterial infection, and is therefore treated 
with standard antibiotics, usually a member of the 
penicillin family.  Tetracycline drugs frequently do not 
cure gonorrhea, especially in cases of anal infection.  One 
variety of gonorrhea, penicilliase-producing N. gonorrhea, 
is immune to penicillin, and drugs of the cyclosporin family 
may be necessary.
  - Transmission:
 - The bacteria that causes gonorrhea can be passed through 
sexual contact, such as intercourse, fellatio, anal sex, 
cunnilingus and even kissing, although the last is rare.  
  
 
- Symptoms:
- Primary Stage:
  - A chancre sore develops at the site of infection from two to 
four weeks after infection has occurred. The chancre is 
painless 75% of the time. The chancre starts as a dull red 
spot, turns into a pimple, which ulcerates, forming a round 
or oval sore with a red rim. The sore heals in 4-6 weeks - 
however, the infection is still present. The chancre is 
usually found on the genitals or anus, but can appear on any 
part of the skin.
  - Secondary Stage:
 - One week to six months after the chancre heals. Pale red or 
pinkish rash appears (often on palms or soles) fever, sore 
throat, headaches, joint pains, poor appetite, weight loss, 
hair loss. Moist sores may appear around the genitals or 
anus and are highly infectious. Symptoms usually last three 
to six months, but can come and go.
  - Latent Stage:
 - No apparent symptoms, and the carrier is no longer 
contagious. However, the organism is insinuating itself into 
the host's tissues. 50 to 70 percent of carriers pass the 
rest of their lives without the disease leaving this stage. 
The reminder pass into Last Stage syphilis.
  - Last Stage:
 - Serious heart problems, eye problems, brain and spinal cord 
damage, with a high probability of paralysis, insanity, 
blindness or death.
  - Treatment:
 - Penicillin by injection, or a two-week regimen of 
tetracycline, is the standard treatment for syphilis.  Two 
follow-up blood tests two weeks apart after ending treatment 
are necessary to ensure the treatment is complete.  The 
first three stages of syphilis are completely curable, and 
even in the last stage syphilis can be stopped.  With the 
present medical technology to diagnose and treat syphilis, 
no one should ever suffer the effects of last-stage 
syphilis.
  - Transmission:
 - Nominally sexual contact, but can be transmitted by blood 
transfusion or from an infected pregnant woman to her 
fetus.
  
 
- Symptoms:
 - Half of the people infected with HPV do not show any 
symptoms.  When symptoms are present, they are small, 
visible warts appearing at the tip of the penis or at the 
opening of vagina.  In women, HPV also causes cervical 
lesions.  Warts can occur anywhere on the shaft of penis or 
the scrotum in men, and anywhere around the labial area or 
inside the vagina in women.  In women, an abnormal Pap smear 
may indicate cervical lesions, but a coloscopy is necessary 
to confirm this.
  - Treatment:
 - Warts are pinpoint infections, and can be treated as such.  
Podophyllin solution, trichlorocetic acid, and fluorouracil 
cream are three chemical solutions used to burn warts from 
the skin.  Liquid nitrogen or lasers are sometimes used, as 
well as electrodessication.  A six-month check-up is 
necessary to confirm that all the warts were destroyed, and 
even then a small percentage of people may experience a 
recurrence of warts within 18 months.
  - Transmission:
 - The virus is transmitted through sexual contact.  Warts are 
considered very contagious even in people who show no 
visible symptoms.
   
 
- Full  Name:
 - Herpes Simplex Virus I and Herpes Simplex Virus II.  HSV-I 
is most often associated with cold sores or fever blisters 
about the mouth and lips, while HSV-II is associated with 
sores around the gential area.  There is some crossover, 
however, and each virus will survive quite comfortably in 
both regions.
  - Symptoms:           
 - Herpes is marked by clusters of small, painful blisters on 
the genitals. After a few days, the blisters burst, leaving 
small ulcers. In men, the blisters usually appear on the 
penis, but can appear in the urethra or rectum. In women, 
they usually appear on the labia, but can appear on the 
cervix and anal area. First outbreaks are accompanied by 
fever, headache, and muscle soreness for two or more 
consecutive days in 39% of men and 68% of women. Other 
relatively common symptoms include painful urination 
discharge from the urethra or vagina, and tender, swollen 
lymph nodes in the groin. These symptoms tend to disappear 
within two weeks. Aseptic meningitis occurs in 8 percent of 
cases, eye infections in 1% of cases, and infection of the 
cervix in 88% of infected women. Skin lesions last on 
average 16.5 days in men, 19.7 in women. Secondary symptoms 
are most prominent in the first four days and then gradually 
diminish.
  - Recurrence:
 - None in 10% of cases. Frequency for the remaining 
population is from once a month to once every few years. The 
majority of sufferers do not have repeat attacks after a few 
years. Most repeat attacks are less severe than the initial 
attack.
  - Treatment:
 - There is no medical cure for herpes.  Treatment with 
acyclovir reduces pain and viral reproduction during 
outbreaks of sores, although it will not delay or prevent 
recurrences.
  - Transmission:
 - Generally by sexual contact. Direct contact with infected 
genitals can cause transmission via intercourse, rubbing 
genitals together, oral genital contact, anal sex, or 
oral/anal contact. In addition, normally protected areas of 
skin can become infected if there is a cut, rash, sore. 
Herpes viruses can be spread in some instances by kissing, 
if one participant has the infection sited in or near the 
mouth.
   
 
- Symptoms:
 - Pubic lice are just that, lice that has infested your public 
hair.  The most common symptom is intense itching, usually 
felt mostly at night. Some victims have no symptoms, others 
may develop an allergic rash.
  - Treatment:
 - Various shampoos and lotions exist to kill lice, but the 
best solution is simply to shave off the pubic and hair and 
shower vigorously afterwards. 
  - Transmission:
 - Nominally through sexual contact, however they may be picked 
up through use of sheets, towels or clothing used by an 
infected person.
   
 
- Caused by:
 - Chlamydia trachomatous, T. mycoplasma, ureaplasma 
urealyticum, mycolasma hominis.  An estimated quarter of 
cases are allergic reactions to latex or spermicide.
  - Symptoms:
 - Similar to gonorrhea but usually milder. Urethral discharge 
is generally thin and clear.  Planned Parenthood estimates 
that half of the women with one of these diseases doesn't 
know it.  NSU/NGU in women can lead to pelvic inflammatory 
disease and sterility.
  - Transmission:
 - In cases involving a pathogen, sexual intercourse, as well 
as hands with semen or vaginal secretions on them infecting 
the eye.
  - Treatment:
 - Penicillin is generally not effective against NGU/NSU-
causing organisms.  Tetracycilne is generally prescribed; 
sulfa drugs are effective against chlamydia but not the 
others.
   
 
- Symptoms:
 - About half of those who get hepatitis B will suffer from an 
inflammation of the liver, called acute hepatitis. Many 
people with hepatitis B mistake the symptoms for other 
illnesses, such as the flu, while others are more seriously 
affected and may miss school or work for months. Other 
common symptoms include skin rashes and arthritis,   nausea, 
vomiting, loss of appetite, malaise, abdominal pain, and 
jaundice (yellowing of the eyes and skin).
  - Treatment:
 - There is no cure for hepatitis B.  There is a vaccine, 
however, that is very effective.  It is also expensive.  
Consult your physician.  A small percentage of people who 
acquire hepatitis B will carry the virus in their 
bloodstreams for the rest of their lives as carriers.
  - Transmission:
 - Hepatitis B is transmitted through contact with the bodily 
fluids of an infected person, and that includes sexual 
contact.  It is a considered a highly infectious disease and 
should be taken seriously.
   
 
Elf Sternberg <[email protected]>
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