“Brazilians' and other pubic hair removal may increase the risk of a highly contagious viral skin infection, French researchers have warned.” They found ‘micro trauma’ caused by waxing and shaving might aid the spread of the Molluscum contagium. The viral infection can be easily spread through skin-to-skin contact with someone who is infected, or it can be passed on by touching contaminated objects, such as a flannel or towel. It is relatively common in children and people whose immune systems are compromised by illness or medication. However, it can also be passed on through sex, and over the past decade the number of sexually transmitted cases has risen. The researchers, who published their findings in the British Medical Journal, wanted to know if the rise in the number of such infections was connected to the increasing popularity of pubic hair removal among patients who visited a private skin clinic in Nice, France, between January 2011 and March 2012. Of the 30 people infected with Molluscum contagiosum during this time, six were women, and the average age of the group was 29.5. Signs of the infection - pearly papules - had spread up to the abdomen in four cases and to the thighs in one. In ten cases, there were other associated skin conditions, including ingrown hairs, warts and folliculitis - a bacterial skin infection, cysts and scars. Among the 30 patients, 93 per cent had had their pubic hair removed, with 70 per cent opting for shaving. Among the rest, it had either been clipped - 13 per cent - or waxed - 10 per cent. As the Molluscum contagiousum can spread relatively easily by self-infection, such as scratching, hair removal might also facilitate transmission as a result of the ‘micro trauma’ it causes to the skin, suggest the researchers. Last year, researchers at the University of California San Fransisco warned that the growing trend for brazilians and vajazzles has led to an five-fold increase in the number of women admitted to hospital with injuries to their genitals. Their survey showed that between 2002 and 2010 around 16,000 people a year in the US (142,144 adults in total) ended up in emergency rooms with genital injuries. But it's not all bad news. Last year Australian researchers announced that the bikini wax may have made pubic lice an endangered species. Figures from Sydney's main sexual health clinic revealed that doctors there had not treated a woman with pubic lice since 2008, while male cases have fallen 80 per cent from a decade ago.
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