Yoshimura Koji, Yamamoto Shingo, Kawauchi Akihiro, Ito Mikio, Nakagawa Shuichi, Horii Yasuki, Higashi Yoshihito, Okamura Yasuhiko, Yamazoe Yoshihiro, Nin Fuminori, Inoue Susumu, Kihara Yuji, Nonomura Mitsuo, Hida Shuichi, Okuno Hiroshi, Okasho Akira, Kamoi Kazumi, Maekawa Mikio, Kitamori Tomohito, Aoki Tadashi, Kamoto Toshiyuki, Nakao Masahiro, Ogawa Osamu, Miki Tsuneharu, Ohe Hiroshi, Muratani Tetsuro, Matsumoto Tetsuro
The Sexually Transmitted Disease Research Group, Kyoto Urologic Society.
Hinyokika Kiyo. 2006 Apr;52(4):265-70.
The data of sexually transmitted urethritis in males have been collected at 24 institutes in Kyoto Prefecture since October, 2002. The data collected from January to December in 2004 are summarized herein. A total of 1,275 patients were diagnosed with urethritis during this period. Microbiological examinations isolated Neisseria gonorrhoeae alone in 368 (29%), Chlamydia tracomatis alone in 336 (26%), both in 85 (7%), and others in 453 (36%). Male patients under 20 years old tended to have Chlamydial urethritis, alone or combined with gonococcal infection, and had a predominant infectious source, a non-commercial-sexual-worker female partner, suggesting a profound problem in sexual life of adolescents. The urologist preferred to use quinolones as the first therapeutic modality against male urethritis. However, drug resistance of N. gonorrhoeae, especially against quinolones, has rapidly progressed, which was also observed by a sensitivity examination test. Antibiotics should be used adequately against male urethrits according to the recent guidelines.