A media roundtable discussion organised by Journalists Against AIDS (JAAIDS) Nigeria, was held in the Nigerian city of Abuja last week to discuss the potential of lemons/limes as a microbicide to defend against HIV infection.

Two of the experts who spoke at the roundtable were Professor Solomon Sagay of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology at the Jos University Teaching Hospital (JUTH) and Dr Chris Agboghoroma of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology at the National Hospital Abuja.

According to Sagay, studies conducted at Jos have shown that use of lime juice as a contraceptive to prevent pregnancy, and as disinfectant to prevent infections was rife among women in parts of Nigeria.


Professor Sagay, who was part of the team that conducted the study in Jos
in June 2004,
noted that many of the women who participated in the study believed that use of lime juice and other products such as potash, alum, lemon drinks offer them some protection against sexually transmitted infections, including HIV.

But he noted that there was yet no evidence that these products offer such protection.

Two separate studies recently conducted in the United States in 2005, have however found evidence that use of concentrated lime juice damages the vaginal walls and potentially put users at an even higher risk of being infected with HIV.


However, Professor Sagay noted that the American research was carried out using sexually-abstinent women.

"In Nigeria, use of lime juice is more common among women who are highly sexually-active", he pointed out. "The effects of varying concentrations of lime juice in sexually active women, whose vaginas are exposed to seminal fluid and spermatozoa (which are alkaline) still need to be evaluated," he said.


The Jos study, which was conducted by a team at the Jos University Teaching Hospital, examined the use of lemon or lime juice douches among sexually-active women. Findings from the study established that lemon juice or lime douching is used extensively among female sex workers and family planning clients (FPCs).


Of the 300 sexually active women interviewed, 167 confirmed using vaginal lemon/lime douches. The lime juice was used either neat, or diluted either before or after sex.


32 out of 167 (or 19%) of the women found the lime juice painful. Over half of the women believed that it protected them from pregnancy and or sexually transmitted infections, and they did not know their HIV status. 86 percent of the women expressed willingness to recommend the lime juice to other women and 71 per cent said they would be willing to take part in a study to evaluate its safety and effectiveness.


The 2nd phase of this study, which involves conducting a vaginal examination (Copolscopy) of women who have been using lime juice as a means of protection against sexually transmitted infections, is currently being conducted at JUTH.


According to Professor Sagay, the study, which does not involve the administration lime> juice in any form, seeks to clinically assess the safety (or otherwise) an efficacy of lime juice in this group of women.
Results of this study will
serve as a baseline for describing the safety/side effects of lime juice as vaginal douche.


Dr Agboghoroma observed that anecdotal evidence pointed to the fact that Nigerian women are using lime juice "for all sorts of purposes and secretly recommending it to one another". However, it is better to act on the side of caution regarding its potential to protect against HIV, he said.


Both researchers emphasised the need to promote abstinence, and use of condoms as the acceptable means of protection against sexual transmission of HIV.

They also called on the Nigerian Government to invest greater resources into research that would evaluate the potentials of lime juice as a contraceptive and microbicide.

********Those involved in The Mary Magdalene Project have never claimed that lemon or lime juice is a proven microbicide to defend women against HIV infection

 

 

 

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