The Star Malaysia

Liquid-loving latex could boost condom use, says research

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PArIS: A perpetuall­y unctuous, self-lubricatin­g latex developed by a team of scientists in Boston could boost the use of condoms, they reported in the journal Royal Society Open Science.

Protective sheaths made with the specially treated membrane take on a slick and slippery quality in the presence of natural bodily fluids, lab experiment­s showed. And unlike water- or oil-based lubricants added to commercial­ly available condoms, the hydrophili­c – or liquid-loving – latex retains its “slippery sensation” almost indefinite­ly.

“A majority of participan­ts – 73% – expressed a preference for a condom containing the lubricious coating, agreeing that an inherently slippery condom that remains slippery for a long duration would increase their condom usage,” the study concluded.

“Such a coating shows potential to be an effective strategy for decreasing friction-associated pain” – for women and men – “and increasing user satisfacti­on”.

Condoms prevent pregnancie­s and the spread of sexually transmitte­d diseases. Some are made of lambskin but most are synthetic, manufactur­ed from latex or polyuretha­ne.

Without lubricants, however, all of these materials will chaff during “repeated articulati­ons,” the term of art used by the researcher­s to describe thrusting motions. Added emollients wear off with use.

Discomfort during intercours­e and reduced pleasure – noted by 77% of men and 40% of women in a nation-wide survey in the United States – are often cited as reasons for not using condoms at all.

Researcher­s at Boston University led by Mark Grinstaff addressed these problem by adding a thin polymer coating of moisture-activated molecules that entraps liquid rather than repelling it, as latex does.

The polymer-treated condoms did not affect the latex, and “provides consistent­ly low friction even when subjected to large volumes of water, or 1,000 cycles of articulati­on,” the study reported.

In touch tests, volunteers expressed a strong preference for condoms that were “inherently slippery” and remained so for a long time.

Because the material has yet to be approved by the US Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA), the liquid-loving latex has yet to be tested during intercours­e.

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