Spermicidal contraceptives increase the risk of HIV infection AIDS researchers hoping to develop a product that can invisibly protect women from HIV infection recently announced with disappointment that trials have found that spermicidal contraceptives expected to protect women from HIV infection actually increase the risk of HIV infection. At the 13th International AIDS Conference, Dr. Zhou Serv Pillens, head of the HIV killer development team of the United Nations AIDS Project, pointed out that a kind called nonoxynol-9 (trade name advantages), a spermicide marketed by Colombia Laboratories, Inc., not only failed to protect women in Benin
panty vibrator , Ivory Coast, Thailand and South Africa from HIV infection, but also had a higher HIV infection rate among users than the control group who used placebo. Fifty-nine patients in the experimental group were infected
adult toys for men , while only 41 in the control group were infected. This is a significant difference. AIDS control enthusiasts
silicone dildo , researchers and health experts have long called for the development of microbicides similar to "invisible condoms" or "safe creams" to protect people from HIV infection and other sexually transmitted diseases such as syphilis and gonorrhea. This microbiocide allows a woman to protect herself from infection without the man's cooperation. But the n-9 test results disappointed them. The United Nations AIDS Project reports that its research goals have shifted to other microbicides. They called for phase III testing of new and more microbicides as soon as possible, the last phase of testing before products are approved for market entry. But the problem now is a lack of funding and the reluctance of large pharmaceutical companies to develop microbicides. The Bill Melinda Gates Foundation has announced a $25 million grant for research on microbicides. The grant will go to the Conrad Institute for the Collaborative Contraceptive Research Industry, a collaborative program at Eastern Virginia Medical School. Association leader Henry Kabinik
male chastity cages , professor of obstetrics and gynecology, said they will use the money to accelerate research on several promising compounds, such as cellulose sulfate, a polymer used in Europe in the past as contraceptive use. In laboratory utensils, sulfate cellulose protects cells from infection with the HIV virus. In the early research stage, its response was satisfactory, so they believed that there was a good chance of success.
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