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Trichomoniasis is an infection of the vagina and penis. It is a sexually transmitted disease that can be treated and does not cause any serious permanent damage. However, if a pregnant woman is infected and does not get treated, the disease can cause the baby to be born early or have a low birth weight (less than 5 pounds).
A tiny organism called Trichomonas vaginalis causes the infection. Sexual partners not using condoms can spread these organisms to each other during sex.
Many women who have trichomoniasis do not have any symptoms. When they do have symptoms, the most common ones are:
Men usually do not have symptoms. Some men may temporarily have an irritation inside the penis, mild discharge, or slight burning after urination or ejaculation.
Your health care provider will examine you. Your provider will get a sample of fluid from the vagina or penis and look for trichomonas under the microscope.
Your health care provider may also test for other sexually transmitted infections.
Trichomoniasis is treated with a medicine called metronidazole, or Flagyl.
Do not drink any alcohol while you are taking Flagyl and for 2 days after you finish the medication. Drinking alcohol while you are taking Flagyl may cause a severe nausea and vomiting.
Flagyl may be taken with food to prevent nausea and vomiting (possible side effects of the drug).
Your sexual partner also needs to be treated at the same time.
For most people, the symptoms disappear less than 1 week after treatment.
The symptoms of trichomoniasis in infected men may go away in a few weeks without treatment. However, an infected man, even one who has no symptoms, can keep infecting or reinfecting a female partner until he has been treated.
The genital inflammation caused by trichomoniasis can make it easier for a woman to become infected with HIV if she is exposed to the HIV virus. Having trichomoniasis may increase the chance that an HIV-infected woman passes HIV to sex partners.
Call your health care provider if: