The prevalence and complications of Mycoplasma genitalium and Chlamydia trachomatis infections among women undergoing termination of pregnancy were studied in this nested case-control study at Malmo University Hospital, Sweden, during 2003 to 2007. The study comprised 2079 women presenting for termination of pregnancy. Forty-nine women with M. genitalium infection and 51 women with C. trachomatis infection, together with 168 negative control women, were evaluated. The prevalences of M. genitalium and C. trachomatis were 2.5% and 2.8%, respectively. The M. genitalium was strongly associated with posttermination pelvic inflammatory disease (odds ratio 6.29, 95% CI 1.56-25.2). The increased risk for pelvic inflammatory disease associated with M. genitalium infection after termination of pregnancy suggests a causal relationship.
One hundred-eighty-five consecutive spermiograms from men of infertile couples in 1980-1981 were compared with as many spermiograms of age-matched controls from 1960-1961. The semen parameters analyzed were: volume. sperm density, and sperm morphology. The following significant changes were noted over the time period: the mean seminal volume decreased from 3.79 ml to 3.42 ml (p < 0.05), the mean sperm count decreased from 125.4 mill/rnl to 78.0 mill/rnl (p < 0.001) and the proportion of double sperm heads increased from 0.52% to 1.51% (p < 0.001). Further analysis showed even more pronounced changes in these parameters for men living in the urban area compared those from the surrounding rural areas.
Serum antibodies to Chlamydia trachomatis were studied by microimmunofluorescence (micro-IF) testing and by immunoblotting among 52 women with C. trachomatis cervical infection. All women underwent therapeutic abortion, and 10 (19.2%) subsequently developed laparoscopically confirmed salpingitis. Women who developed salpingitis had lower geometric mean titers of micro-IF antibody before abortion (14.9 x/divided by 2.3) than did women who did not develop salpingitis (41.6 x/divided by 4.9, P less than .01). Women who developed salpingitis significantly less often had serum IgA antibodies to a 60-kilodalton (kDa) chlamydial antigen (P = .02) and IgG antibodies to antigens of 75-kDa (P = .008), 60-kDa (P = .03), and 57-kDa (P = .0003). Serum antibodies to 100-kDa, 32-kDa, and 29-kDa antigens occurred only in women who did not develop salpingitis. Differences in antibody prevalence to specific chlamydial antigens were not due to differences in serum antibody titers between the two groups. No correlation between neutralizing sera and the risk of postabortal salpingitis was detected.
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