Gym Rats, Beware of Jock Itch One really needs to tip one’s hat to gym rats, those incredibly dedicated guys who spend hours at the gym to hone and perfect their physiques while so many of us opt instead to sit on the couch and exercise by lifting and pressing on the TV remote or the computer mouse. While some gym enthusiasts may go overboard, their attention to physical health – and, one assumes, male organ health as well – is admirable. So for all those who make the gym their second home – as well as for those who are less steady in their gym visits – the following tips and information concerning jock itch should help keep midsections healthier. An itch by any other name Jock itch is medically known as tinea cruris, and it’s a close relative to the also-familiar athlete’s foot (tinea pedis). Like athlete’s foot, jock itch is a fungal infection, meaning that the culprit that starts it all is a fungus. For those whose memory of high school science is failing them, a fungus is one of a group of organisms that range from itty bitty guys like mold and yeast to bigger lifeforms, such as mushrooms. Many fungi occur naturally in small amounts on the human body with no problem. But when they overproduce, they can become an infection, and that’s what happens with jock itch. Too much fungus grows, creating a very itchy rash that is usually circular in shape, red, and sometimes raised and crusty. Jock itch can appear on the member, the sacks, the buttocks, the thighs, or anywhere in the general midsection area. The fungus that results in jock itch, like all fungi, loves moist, dark spaces. This is the ideal environment in which to grow. And the midsection is a moist, dark place – usually made even moister from sweat accumulated during a gym workout. Prevention Jock itch is by no means a serious male organ health issue – but man, can it ever be an annoying one! Often, the itch associated with the condition can be intense, and it can be embarrassing to be caught scratching away at one’s www.man1health.com