Clinical evidence of bacterial vaginosis was present in 25 (35%) of 72 patients attending a London venereology clinic and correlated significantly with abnormal organic acids in vaginal secretions (24/25), with Gardnerella vaginalis on culture (17/25), with compliants of vaginal malodour (15/25), and with a relative scarcity of white blood cells in vaginal secretions. Anaerobic vaginal flora were presumptively identified by gas-liquid chromatographic analysis of organic acids found in vaginal secretions. The clinical criteria used to diagnose bacterial vaginosis included the presence of at least three of the four following characteristics: (a) a vaginal pH ≥ 4.5, vaginal secretions that (b) were homogeneous, (c) contained 'clue' cells, and (d) released a 'fishy' amine odour when mixed with 10% potassium hydroxide. Because 17 of the 25 patients with clinical bacterial vaginosis had both chromatographic bacterial vaginosis and G vaginalis, causative organisms were difficult to identify. None of the six patients who had G vaginalis but not chromatographic bacterial vaginosis had clinical bacterial vaginosis, but seven of the 10 women with chromatographic bacterial vaginosis but not G vaginalis had clinical bacterial vaginosis (p < 0.02, χ2 with Yates's correction). This finding supports that recent suggestions that anaerobes are important in the production of clinical signs of bacterial vaginosis.
CITATION STYLE
Hill, L. V. H. (1985). Anaerobes and Gardnerella vaginalis in non-specific vaginitis. Genitourinary Medicine, 61(2), 114–119. https://doi.org/10.1136/sti.61.2.114
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