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Circumcision
Seen as
Method to Block HIV Infection
Circumcised men are less likely to be
infected with the virus that causes AIDS because of biological
reasons and not less risky behavior, scientists said.
Studies have shown that men whose
foreskin has been removed are six to eight times less likely to
become HIV positive but there has been some debate about the reason
for the lower infection rate.
Researchers at Johns Hopkins University
Medical School in Baltimore, Maryland found that circumcision
had a protective effect against HIV, but not against other sexually
transmitted infections (STIs) such as syphilis or gonorrhoea.
"The specificity of this relation
suggests a biological rather than behavioral explanation for the
protective effect of male circumcision against HIV," Dr Robert
Bollinger said in a report in The Lancet medical journal. Although
male circumcision is common in the United States, the practice
varies throughout the world and is influenced by cultural and
religious attitudes.
Bollinger and his team studied
men in India, where circumcision is not common, between 1993 and
2000. All of the 2,298 men were attending one of three sexually
transmitted disease clinics and were HIV negative at the start
of the study. Their HIV status and risk behavior were assessed
regularly.
"These data confirm previous findings
that male circumcision reduces the risk of HIV acquisition," said
Bollinger.
Because circumcision did not prevent
the men from infection with other STIs, Bollinger believes the
study supports the hypothesis that protection is due to the removal
of the foreskin, which contains cells that have HIV receptors
which scientists suspect are the primary entry point for the virus
into the penis.
"Our results suggest that the foreskin
has an important role in the biology of sexual transmission of
HIV," he said.
Some researchers have recommended
male circumcision as a means to prevent the spread of HIV. Bollinger
and his team called for clinical trials, where culturally acceptable,
to assess the safety and effectiveness of male circumcision as
a toll against AIDS.
They also stressed the need for
new compounds to block the entry of the virus into the cell.
Reference
Source 89
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