Only 35% of women who were treated for bacterial vaginosis along with their male sexual partners had recurrence in the study ...
Bacterial vaginosis affects one third of reproductive-aged women, and recurrence is common. Evidence of sexual exchange of ...
Treating male partners in addition to women with bacterial vaginosis results in a lower rate of recurrence than treat ...
A new study published in The New England Journal of Medicine revealed that in addition to treating female patients, treating ...
the woman received first-line recommended antimicrobial agents and the male partner received oral and topical antimicrobial treatment (metronidazole 400-mg tablets and 2% clindamycin cream applied ...
Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is not classified as a sexually transmitted infection, but the results of a new study could change ...
Landmark study shows treating both partners for bacterial vaginosis improves outcomes, but experts suggest there may be more to the story.
The addition of treatment for male partners reduced the recurrence of bacterial vaginosis among women enrolled in a randomized trial compared with treating only the women, researchers reported.