Ureaplasma is a particularly small bacterium belonging to the family Mycoplasmataceae (commonly known as mycoplasma). There are seventeen identified species, most usually found in the respiratory and urogenital tracts. The 2 Ureaplasma biovars, Ureaplasma urealyticum and Ureaplasma parvum, are now designated as separate species. Separation of these species is not possible except via molecular techniques such as polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Therefore, they are now considered together as Ureaplasma species. U parvum is generally the most common species detected in various clinical specimens but U urealyticum is more pathogenic in conditions such as male urethritis. This differential pathogenicity at the species level has not been shown consistently for other disease conditions.
Urealyticumis commonly found in the genital flora of sexually active men and women. It is found in about 70% of sexually active humans, and is usually commensal (harmless and symptom-free). You have a high chance of being infected with it if you have unprotected sex with someone who has had other sexual partners, and your chances of infection increase exponentially with the number of different partners.
Ureaplasma is extremely contagious, and is most often spread through sexual contact and unprotected sex with multiple partners. In more extreme cases, you can become infected if you touch an infected person’s nose or eye secretions, or if an infected person coughs in your face.
Even if you have no symptoms, you can still pass the microorganisms in your genitals to your partner(s). This is why so many adults are infected – the infected source person has no symptoms, and usually the person they infect also shows no symptoms
Symptoms
If infection with this bacterium goes undetected, untreated or recurs, it reduces the fertility of both men and women, causes internal scarring, and has been implicated as the cause in preterm births, stillbirths, sepsis in newborn.
Test Options
STI-9*: Identification in a panel of 9 STI’s
Ureaplasma Uryalyticum/Parvum: Identification and differentiation of species.
Learn more about Ureaplasma
http://www.rightdiagnosis.com/u/ureaplasma_urealyticum/intro.htm
http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/231470-overview
http://www.healthexpress.co.uk/ureaplasma.html
http://www.thesticlinic.com/ureaplasma-urealyticum.aspx
http://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases_conditions/hic_Ureaplasma_and_Mycoplasma