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Featuring: Drake
Sound like my mic is right
I-I am not a human, shout to all my moon men
Yeah, they call me Tune, got them bitches tuned in
It's a crazy world so I stay in mine
And nigga's don't cross the line, nigga's stay in line
Like welfare, I'm St. Elsewhere
Hotter than a devil, nigga, hell yeah
Roc-a-bye, baby, homicide, baby
That's more tear drops, call me cry baby
What you talkin' 'bout? Tell it to my nine
Cut your tongue out, mail it to your moms
I'm the young god, swagga un-flawed
Bitch I'm in the buildin', you in the front yard
Life's a bitch, nah, better yet a dumb broad
And I bet I can fuck the world and make it come hard
Yeah, you boys is washed up
And I'm shittin' on 'em like two girls and one cup
Weezy Baby a.k.a. "Bring The Money Home"
Pull out a AK and pop ya in ya funny bone
Laugh now, die later, motherfucker
You's a bitch like zeta phi beta motherfucker
Yeah, call it how I see ya
I wish I never met ya, I wouldn't wanna be ya
Pussy ass nigga, I don't want your gonorrhea
Pussy ass nigga, I don't want your gonorrhea
Yeah, I call it how I see ya
I wish I never met ya, I wouldn't wanna be ya
Pussy ass nigga, I don't want your gonorrhea
P-p-pussy ass nigga, I don't want your gonorrhea
Man, I'm so tired of ballin' I sleep a lot now
I let my goons rush ya like Moscow
Gun at ya eyebrow, pow pow
Man, I ball hard even with five fouls
Yeah, we in this bitch like tampon's
Dump you in the woods, now get yo' camp on
Choke hold around this shit 'cause I'm so hands on
I get high as fuck and Polo sheets is what I lands on
Back against the wall and my two feet is what I stand on
Diva in the room, she blowin' me just like a band horn
Got her on her knees the same knees that she be prayin' on
Now she just text her girlfriend with a capital, you can join
Yeah, what y'all wanna do? I'm all ears
Smokin' on that head band, call that shit the Paul Pearce
I'm just so ahead of my time like dog years
Ball like Solange, India Arie, Britney Spears
Yeah, call it how I see ya
I wish I never met ya, I wouldn't wanna be ya
Pussy ass nigga, I don't want your gonorrhea
Pussy ass nigga, I don't want your gonorrhea
Yeah, I call it how I see ya
W-wish I never met ya, I wouldn't wanna be ya
Pussy ass nigga, I don't want your gonorrhea
P-p-pussy ass nigga, I don't want your gonorrhea
I am spendin' much more than
I'm makin' on these cars and these vacations, is that too much information?
I just bought a Lamborghini, I'm not even into racin'
With a windshield full of tickets 'cause I live right by the station
I am tryin' to figure out why you so mad at me
Yes, I'm with Young Money, tell that magazine stop askin' me
I be with the dread, with the tattoo's on his head
And a flag the colour red like a fuckin' low battery, okay
Nigga peep the shit I'm wilin' on
I be with your baby momma, you be with your child at home
Big Mo, Big Red, two cups made of Styrofoam
Big cheese, big bread, call that shit a calzone, okay
I will break your fuckin' collar bone
Us against the world, better pick which fuckin' side you on
Wayne got a Bugatti that he steady puttin' mileage on
And we about to kill 'em C4, Mr. Carters home
Yeah, call it how I see ya
I wish I never met ya, I wouldn't wanna be ya
We some asshole nigga's, call us diarrhea
The Money keep growin' yep, it's growin' like a Chia
Yeah, I call it how I see it
Y'all some pussy ass niggas, we should call ya gonorrhea
You keep talkin' that shit I'ma see ya
Gonorrhea | |
---|---|
Classification and external resources | |
During WWII, the US government used posters to warn servicemen about the dangers of gonorrhea and other sexually transmitted infections. |
|
ICD-10 | A54 |
ICD-9 | 098 |
MedlinePlus | 007267 |
eMedicine | article/782913 |
MeSH | D006069 |
Gonorrhea (also colloquially known as the clap[1]) is a common human sexually transmitted infection caused by the bacterium Neisseria gonorrhoeae. The usual symptoms in men are burning with urination and penile discharge. Women, on the other hand, are asymptomatic half the time or have vaginal discharge and pelvic pain. In both men and women if gonorrhea is left untreated, it may spread locally causing epididymitis or pelvic inflammatory disease or throughout the body, affecting joints and heart valves.
Treatment is commonly with ceftriaxone as antibiotic resistance has developed to many previously used medications.
In 2011, there were reports of some strains of gonorrhea showing resistance to ceftriaxone.[2]
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Half of women with gonorrhea are asymptomatic while others have vaginal discharge, lower abdominal pain or pain with intercourse.[3] The most common male symptoms are urethritis associated with burning with urination and discharge from the penis.[3] Either sex may also acquire gonorrhea of the throat from performing oral sex on an infected partner, usually a male partner. Such infection is asymptomatic in 90% of cases, and produces a sore throat in the remaining 10%.[4] The incubation period is 2 to 14 days with most of these symptoms occurring between 4–6 days after being infected.[5] Rarely, gonorrhea may cause skin lesions and joint infection (pain and swelling in the joints) after traveling through the blood stream (see below). Very rarely it may settle in the heart causing endocarditis or in the spinal column causing meningitis (both are more likely among individuals with suppressed immune systems, however).[4]
Gonorrhea is caused by the bacteria Neisseria gonorrhoeae.[3] The infection is transmitted from one person to another through vaginal, oral, or anal sex.[3] Men have a 20% risk of getting the infection from a single act of vaginal intercourse with an infected woman. The risk for men who have sex with men is higher.[6] Women have a 60–80% risk of getting the infection from a single act of vaginal intercourse with an infected man.[7] A mother may transmit gonorrhea to her newborn during childbirth; when affecting the infant's eyes, it is referred to as ophthalmia neonatorum.[3] It cannot be spread by toilets or bathrooms.[8]
Traditionally, gonorrhea was diagnosed with gram stain and culture; however, newer polymerase chain reaction (PCR) based testing methods are becoming more common.[9] In those who fail initial treatment culture should be done to determine sensitivity to antibiotics.[10] All people who test positive for gonorrhea should be tested for other sexually transmitted diseases such as chlamydia, syphilis and human immunodeficiency virus.[10]
The United States Preventive Services Task Force recommends screening for gonorrhea in women at increased risk of infection which includes all sexually active women younger than 25 years. It is not recommended in males without symptoms or low risk women.[11]
While the only sure way of preventing gonorrhea is abstaining from sexual intercourse, the risk of infection can be reduced significantly by using condoms correctly and by having a mutually monogamous relationship with an uninfected person.[12][13]
Gonorrhea if left untreated may last for weeks or months with higher risks of complications.[3] As of 2010 injectable ceftriaxone appears to be one of the few effective antibiotics.[10] Because of increasing rates of antibiotic resistance local susceptibility patterns need to be taken into account when deciding on treatment.[10] Many antibiotics that were once effective including penicillin, tetracycline and fluoroquinolones are no longer recommended because of high rates of resistance.[10] Cases of resistance to ceftriaxone have been reported but are still rare.[10][10]
As of 2011[update], there are reports of strains of gonorrhea that show antibiotic resistance to multiple agents, specifically to both cefixime and ceftriaxone.[14][15][16][2]
In a 2012 news story, ABC News reported, "A new editorial published in the New England Journal of Medicine highlighted the concern for the rising rate of antibiotic-resistant gonorrhea in the U.S. While the prevalence of resistance to the drug was about .1 percent in 2006, that number jumped to 1.7 percent by mid-2011, the editorial noted."[17]
It is recommended that sexual partners be tested and potentially treated.[10] One option for treating sexual partners of people infected is patient-delivered partner therapy (PDPT) which involves providing prescriptions or medications to the person to take to their partner without the health care provider first examining them.[18]
One of the complication of gonorrhea is systemic dissemination resulting in skin pustules or petechia, septic arthritis, meningitis or endocarditis.[3] This occurs in between 0.6 and 3.0% of women and 0.4 and 0.7% of men.[3]
In men, inflammation of the epididymis (epididymitis); prostate gland (prostatitis) and urethral stricture (urethritis) can result from untreated gonorrhea.[20] In women, the most common result of untreated gonorrhea is pelvic inflammatory disease. Other complications include perihepatitis,[20] a rare complication associated with Fitz-Hugh-Curtis syndrome; septic arthritis in the fingers, wrists, toes, and ankles; septic abortion; chorioamnionitis during pregnancy; neonatal or adult blindness from conjunctivitis; and infertility.
Neonates coming through the birth canal are given erythromycin ointment in the eyes to prevent blindness from infection. The underlying gonorrhea should be treated; if this is done then usually a good prognosis will follow.
Among persons in the United States between 14 and 39 years of age, 46% of people with gonorrheal infection also have chlamydial infection.[21]
Gonorrhea is a common infectious disease. WHO estimates that 62 million cases of gonorrhea appear each year.[22]
In the United Kingdom 196 per 100,000 males 20 to 24 years old, and 133 per 100,000 females 16 to 19 years old were diagnosed in 2005.[3] The CDC estimates that more than 700,000 people in the United States get new gonorrheal infections each year. Only about half of these infections are reported to CDC. In 2004, 330,132 cases of gonorrhea were reported to the CDC. After the implementation of a national gonorrhea control program in the mid-1970s, the national gonorrhea rate declined from 1975 to 1997. After a small increase in 1998, the gonorrhea rate has decreased slightly since 1999. In 2004, the rate of reported gonorrheal infections was 113.5 per 100,000 persons.[23]
In the US, it is the second most common bacterial sexually transmitted infections after chlamydia.[24][25] According to the CDC, "Overall, African Americans are most affected by gonorrhea. Blacks accounted for 69% of all gonorrhea cases in 2010."[26]
It has been suggested that mercury was used as a treatment for gonorrhea. Surgeons' tools on board the recovered English warship the Mary Rose included a syringe that, according to some, was used to inject the mercury via the urinary meatus into any unfortunate crewman suffering from gonorrhea. The name "the clap", in reference to the disease, is recorded as early as the sixteenth century.[1]
Silver nitrate was one of the widely used drugs in the 19th century, but it became replaced by Protargol. Arthur Eichengrün invented this type of colloidal silver, which was marketed by Bayer from 1897 on. The silver-based treatment was used until the first antibiotics came into use in the 1940s.[27][28]
The exact time of onset of gonorrhea as prevalent disease or epidemic cannot be accurately determined from the historical record. One of the first reliable notations occur in the Acts of the (English) Parliament. In 1161 this body passed a law to reduce the spread of "...the perilous infirmity of burning."[29] The symptoms described are consistent with, but not diagnostic of, gonorrhea. A similar decree was passed by Louis IX in France in 1256, replacing regulation with banishment.[30] Similar symptoms were noted at the siege of Acre[disambiguation needed ] by Crusaders.
Coincidental to, or dependent on, the appearance of a gonorrhea epidemic, several changes occurred in European medieval society. Cities hired public health doctors to treat afflicted patients without right of refusal. Pope Boniface[disambiguation needed ] rescinded the requirement that physicians complete studies for the lower orders of the Catholic priesthood.[citation needed]
Medieval public health physicians in the employ of their cities were required to treat prostitutes infected with the "burning", as well as lepers and other epidemic victims.[31] After Pope Boniface completely secularized the practice of medicine, physicians were more willing to treat a sexually transmitted disease.[citation needed]
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