With changing values all around the world, oral sex has gradually become a mainstream sexual activity. Oral sex or oral intercourse is sexual activity involving the stimulation of the genitalia of a person by another person using the mouth (including the lips, tongue or teeth). While cunnilingus is oral sex performed on a female, fellatio is oral sex performed on a male. Anilingus, another form of oral sex, is oral stimulation of a person’s anus. However, oral stimulation of other parts of the body (as in kissing and licking) is usually not considered oral sex.
It may be performed as foreplay to incite sexual arousal before other sexual activities (such as vaginal or anal intercourse), or as an erotic and physically intimate act in its own right.
Perhaps,
one of the reasons for the increase in this form of sexual behaviour is
the belief that it involves a lower risk of contracting sexually
transmitted diseases. However, like most forms of sexual activity, oral
sex can pose a risk for contracting sexually transmitted diseases.
According
to Dr. Olumide Apata , a medical practitioner at the General Hospital,
Ife-Ekiti, Ekiti State, “Oral sex can be risky because it has its own
danger. Most people involved in it do so because they assume there is a
lower risk of contracting a sexually transmitted disease. But the truth
is, there is a high risk of contracting diseases through oral sex.
Sexually transmitted diseases can be categorised into four groups which
are outside the mouth, inside the mouth, inside the throat and those
that manifest all over the body.
“Through
the mouth, one can easily contract Herpes type 1 and type 2. Herpes is
also called cold sores or fever blisters, which is an infection of the
face or mouth. Herpes is mostly easily transmitted by direct contact
with a lesion or the body fluid of an infected person or individual.
Transmission may also occur through skin to skin contact during periods
of asymptomatic shedding. Barrier protection methods are the most
reliable method of preventing transmission of herpes.
“There
is also the risk of contracting oral candidiasis that occurs in the
mouth. Also, mouth gonorrhea, which is also called pharyngeal
gonorrhea, can be contracted through oral sex. People get this infection
when they come in contact with infected people or body fluid like pus,
white discharge or vaginal fluid when secreted from the infected person
thereby causing gonorrhea and also chlamydia infection. While inside the
throat one can contract diseases like throat gonorrhea, throat cancer
and also this gonorrhea can also affect the eyes.”
Not
only can oral sex result to contracting diseases that affect the mouth
and throat, there is also the risk of contracting some life-threatening
diseases including Hepatitis B and C, cancer as well as HIV.
According
to Dr. Irene Bassey, a medical practitioner, “There is a link between
oral sex and cancer but it’s not oral sex, per se, that causes cancer,
but the human papillomavirus (HPV), which can be passed from person to
person during sex, including oral sex. If you aren’t exposed to HPV
during oral sex, you’re not at risk for cancer. When it comes to HIV
transmission, the risk is low but that doesn’t mean it is completely
absent. HIV is, transmitted through bodily fluid contact, so, if there
is for instance, mouth ulcer, bleeding gums or genital sores, there is a
high chance of exposure to the virus. Hepatitis C is a virus that can
infect and damage the liver and it is present in the blood and, to a
much lesser extent, the saliva and semen or vaginal fluid of an infected
person. It can also be transmitted sexually but in the case of oral
sex, the risk is higher when there is an open sore or wound that can
allow for contact of bodily fluids.”
Just
like other forms of sexually transmitted diseases, prevention is always
better than cure and this can be done if individuals take correct
preventive measures. First of all, the more partners you have, the
greater the risk of catching an infection. Also, individuals who intend
to engage in oral sex should get tested first and make sure they are
disease-free before embarking on the act. Medical practitioners have
also advised that the men use condoms and in cases where the woman
doesn’t enjoy oral sex with condoms, flavoured condoms can be used. This
helps to reduce the risks. Also, for the woman, a dam (which is a small
thin square latex or plastic that acts as a barrier between the vagina
or anus and the mouth) can be used. There are also dental dams, mouth
dams or cut –open, non-lubricated condoms that can be put between the
mouth and the partner’s genitals or rectum.
Dr.
Apata adds that women should avoid allowing their partners ejaculate in
their mouths and people should be careful when choosing partner because
sexually transmitted diseases are among the major health problems most
Nigeria are facing and living with.
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