IntroductionDiscordance of various aspects of sexual orientation has been mostly studied in young adults or in small samples of heterosexual men. Studies focusing on concordance and discordance of aspects of sexual orientation in representative samples of middle-aged men including homosexual men are scarce.AimTo investigate concordant and discordant sexual behavior in 45-year-old German men with a special focus on homosexual identified men.MethodsData for this cross-sectional study were collected within the German Male Sex-Study. Participants were 45-year-old Caucasian males from the general population. Men self-reported on sexual identity, sexual experience, and current sexual behavior. Associations between sexual identity, experience, and behavior were analyzed using the chi-square test.Main Outcome MeasureAssociations of sexual identity with sexual experience and behavior in a community-based sample of men, and discordance of sexual identity and behavior especially in the subgroup of homosexual men.Results12,354 men were included in the study. 95.1% (n = 11.749) self-identified as heterosexual, 3.8% (n = 471) as homosexual, and 1.1% (n = 134) as bisexual. Sexual identity was significantly associated with sexual experience and behavior. 85.5% of all men had recently been sexually active, but prevalence of sexual practices varied. In hetero- and bisexuals, vaginal intercourse was the most common sexual practice, whereas oral sex was the most common in homosexuals. A discordance of sexual identity was especially found in homosexual men: 5.5% of homosexuals only had sexual experiences with women, and 10.3% of homosexuals recently had vaginal intercourse. In this latter subgroup, only one-quarter ever had sexual experience with a man, and three-quarters had only engaged in sexual activity with a woman.ConclusionSexual identity is associated with differences in sexual experience and behavior in German middle-aged men. A considerable proportion of homosexual identified men live a heterosexual life.Goethe VE, Angerer H, Dinkel A, et al. Concordance and Discordance of Sexual Identity, Sexual Experience, and Current Sexual Behavior in 45-Year-Old-Men: Results From the German Male Sex-Study. Sex Med 201;6:282–290.
Measurements of pulmonary capillary blood flow by a nitrous oxide rebreathing technique (QN2O) were performed in 21 anesthetized and artificially ventilated minipigs with normal lungs and in nine minipigs with thrombin-induced (75-150 U kg-1 h-1) lung pathology. QN2O was calculated with the Hook-Meyer-formula and compared to cardiac output measurements (thermodilution, QT, or direct Fick's principle, QFick). The coefficient of variation in double QN2O measurements was 0.05. If the tidal volume to dead space ration (VD/VT) is normal, the nitrous oxide method works well, but when the efficacy of ventilation worsens, this gas uptake method fails to detect the circulation of the poorly ventilated parts of the lung. The mean ratio QN2O/QFick in pigs with normal lungs (58 measurements) was 1.00 +/- 0.10 (mean +/- s.d.). During thrombin infusion, the mean ratio QN2O/QT was 0.84 +/- 0.17 (n = 49). After corrections for shunt perfusion (Qs), the mean ration QN2O/(QT-Qs) was 0.89 +/- 0.17 (n = 49). QN2O/QT-Qs) decreased with increasing VD/VT. In measurements during thrombin infusion with VD/VT less than 0.33, the mean ratio QN2O/(QT-Qs) was 0.97 +/- 0.11 (n = 21), with a VD/VT between 0.33 and 0.44, the mean ratio QN2O (QT-QS) was 0.90 +/- 0.08 (n = 20), and with a VD/VT greater than or equal to 0.45, this ratio was 0.62 +/- 0.18 (n = 8). In the presence of only moderate functional inhomogeneities, this noninvasive rebreathing method will offer reliable data on pulmonary perfusion.
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