Bacterial Vaginosis

Bacterial Vaginosis



What is bacterial vaginosis?

Home
Blog - What's New?
Abortion
Acne
Amenorrhoea - Absent Periods
Anatomy Female
Birth Control
Bladder Symptoms
Breast Feeding
Cancer in Women
Childbirth
Diet / Weight Loss
Dysmenorrhoea
Ectopic Pregnancy
Endometrial Ablation
Endometriosis
Female Sexual Problems
Female Sterilization
Fibroids
HRT/HormoneReplacementTherapy
Hysterectomy
Infection
Infertility
Irritable Bowel Syndrome IBS
Libido - Sex Drive
Medication - Drugs
Menopause
Menorrhagia Heavy Periods
Menstruation Menstrual Cycle
Miscarriage
Obesity
Ovarian Cysts
Painful Sex - Dyspareunia
Pap Smear Test
PCOS
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease
Pelvic Pain
PMS- Premenstrual Syndrome
Pregnancy & Childbirth
Prolapse
SHOP / SHOPPING MALL UK
SHOP / Shopping Mall - USA
Ultrasound
Urinary Tract Infection - UTI
Urinary Incontinence
Vaginal Discharge
Viagra, Libido and Sex Drive.
Weight Loss-Dieting
Illustrations
The Author
Contact Us


Authors:

Korn AP. Bolan G. Padian N. Ohm-Smith M. Schachter J. Landers DV.

Institution:

Department of Obstetrics/Gynecology, San Francisco General Hospital,

University of California,San Francisco, CA; United States.

Title:

Plasma cell endometritis in women with symptomatic bacterial vaginosis. (1995 2623)

Source:

Obstetrics and Gynecology. Vol 85(3) (pp87-390), 1995.

Abstract:

style="text-align: justify">

Objectives:

To evaluate the endometrial microbiology and histopathology in women with symptomatic bacterial vaginosis but no signs or symptoms of upper genital tract disease or other vaginal or cervical infections.

Methods:

Endometrial biopsies were performed on 41 women complaining of vaginal discharge or pelvic pain at a sexually transmitted disease clinic. These women had neither culture nor serologic evidence of Neisseria gonorrhoeae or Chlamydia trachomatis infection. Twenty-two women with bacterial vaginosis diagnosed by Gram stain examination of vaginal fluid, but with neither signs nor symptoms of upper genital tract infection, were compared with 19 women who had no evidence of bacterial vaginosis on vaginal fluid Gram stain. Endometrial biopsies were evaluated for histopathologic evidence of plasma cell endometritis and were cultured for N gonorrhoeae, C trachomatis, aerobic and anaerobic bacteria, Mycoplasma species, and Ureaplasma urealyticum.

Results:

Ten of 22 women with bacterial vaginosis had plasma cell endometritis, compared with one of 19 controls (odds ratio [OR] 15, 95% confidence interval [CI] 2-686; P< .01). Bacterial vaginosis-associated organisms were cultured from the endometria of nine of 11 women with and eight of 30 women without plasma cell endometritis (OR 12.4, 95% CI 2-132; P = .002).

Conclusion:

plasma cell endometritis was frequently present in women with bacterial vaginosis and without other vaginal or cervical infections. This suggests the possibility of an association between bacterial vaginosis and nonchlamydial, nongonococcal, upper genital tract infection.



Back Home Up Next

Please click on the required question.