Sexually Transmitted Disease
pathology
sexually transmitted disease (STD), also called sexually transmitted infection, any disease (such as syphilis, gonorrhea, AIDS, or a genital form of herpes simplex) that is usually or often transmitted from person to person by direct sexual contact. It may also be transmitted from a mother to her child before or at birth or, less frequently, may be passed from person to person in nonsexual contact (such as in kissing, in tainted blood transfusions, or in the use of unsanitized hypodermic syringes). Sexually transmitted diseases usually affect initially the genitals, the reproductive tract, the urinary tract, the oral cavity, the anus, or the rectum but may mature in the body to attack various organs and systems. Tertiary syphilis, or paresis, for example, may affect skin, bones, the central nervous system, the heart, the liver, or other organs. Persons infected by human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), the cause of AIDS, may remain outwardly healthy for years before the disease takes hold within the immune system.
The term venereal disease (VD), denoting any disease transmitted by sexual intercourse, lost favour in the late 20th century and was largely supplanted by the more-comprehensive terms sexually transmitted disease and sexually transmitted infection.
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