Month: April 2019

Bacterial Vaginosis

I have itching, burning, irritation and/or abnormal discharge DOWN THERE!? What is HAPPENING to me?! This is so embarrassing!”

Let’s break it down and see the possible causes; what you need to do now and what you need to do in the future. Ultimately, this post is guidance and to give you a better understanding of what may be happening and why. You need to see your primary care to get the proper diagnosis. My goal is to teach and help you understand about certain infections.

If you have been itching, burning or having an abnormal discharge, you might be suffering from a type of vulvovaginitis, which is inflammation of the vulva or vagina. It could be mild or severe. It could occur for the first time and not come back again, or come back again often. In order to treat it appropriately, the type needs to be identified. Is it a yeast infection? Is it bacterial vaginosis? Is it trichomoniasis?

The most common cause of vaginitis is bacterial vaginosis (BV). The next common cause is candidiasis and then it is trichomoniasis. They affect the vulva and the vagina, but other infections can also affect these areas, such as sexually transmitted diseases like herpes, syphilis, chalmydia, gonorrhea. Often when women have vulvovaginitis, they do not have symptoms (70% of the time).

If you are having the symptoms for the first time, you should see your doctor without doing any self-treatment based on what you have read on the internet. Get it diagnosed. What is the cause? If you do self-treatment with nonprescription medications, it may compromise the evaluation. I highly recommend going to your primary care and getting it evaluated not to a blog or youtube channel that gives home remedies.

What will happen during the doctor visit? You will be asked a series of questions then have a speculum examination done to obtain a sample to do various tests on. Then a diagnosis is given and a treatment.

Let’s talk about the normal vulva and vagina:
The vulva contains hair follicles and sebaceous, sweat and apocrine glands. While the vagina does not have these things but is made up of nonkeratinized cells. The vagina is influenced by estrogen stimulation. After puberty, the vaginal tissues will react to estrogen and it will increase glycogen levels which will favor the growth of specific bacteria, lactobacilli, which are the good bacteria. They break down the glycogen into lactic acid and brings the pH at a range of 3.5 – 4.5. This pH level is normal after puberty and before menopause. So, if you test the vaginal pH and have anything above 4.5, this would be abnormal.

Discharges:
There are normal discharges from the vagina. So, do not freak out when you have a discharge. You can have mucus coming from the cervix, exudates from accessory glands, exfoliated squamous cells from the vaginal wall. It could lead to white or off-white color and provides an increased consistency. This is normal. The amount varies depending on many factors, which includes your hormones, hydration status, pregnancy, immunosuppression, and inflammation. Normal vaginal secretions do not have an odor. So, discharge can be normal, but if you ever have an odor — THIS IS NOT NORMAL. No, you won’t normally have a perfume like smell, but you shouldn’t have a bad smell. Pay attention to the smell and if it seems different, bad, then this could be a sign of an infection.

Let’s talk about bacterial vaginosis.
This is due to low levels of the normal bacteria (lactobacilli) and an overgrowth of anaerobic organisms. I know this might be a bit much, but the lactobacilli (the good bacteria in the vagina) produce hydrogen peroxide that breaks down glycogen, which is produced by the vaginal tissues. This causes the pH low to be low (between 3.5-4.5). So, the normal vaginal pH should be between 3.5-4.5. And in bacterial vaginosis you have lower than normal amounts of the lactobacilli, the pH will be higher than normal. This causes overgrowth of the bad bacteria in the vagina. In BV there is this musty or fishy odor and a gray-white to yellow discharge and a pH above 4.5. When you visit your primary care, they will take do a speculum exam and take a sample to check pH, look for clue cells under the microscope (clue cells are epithelial cells with clumps of bacteria clustered on their surfaces).

So, in BV you have abnormal gray discharge, pH level of greater than 4.5 and positive whiff test and presence of clue cells. They are treated with metronidazole oral or topical, or you can be treated with clindamycin. If you are pregnant, you can still be treated with these drugs as they are not teratogenic (these drugs won’t affect your pregnancy).

Vulvovaginal Candidiasis
This is caused by airborne fungi, 90% of it is Candida albicans. This is NOT an STI and they do not generally coexist with other infections. This is more likely to occur in pregnant women, patients on broad-spectrum antibiotics, diabetics, obese, immunosuppressed, those on OCP, those on corticosteroids. Wearing tight clothing or keeping a warm and moist environment can increase candida infection. the most common symptom is itching. But up to 20% of women are asymptomatic. Burning, ezxternal dysuria and dyspareunia are also findings. There is a discharge that looks like cottage cheese. They have a pH of 4 to 4.5. It is odorless. You can have a reliable diagnosis based on history and physical exam alone. OTC treatments are safe and effective but if they do not respond to OTC treatment or they have recurrence soon after treatment should have a definitive diagnosis. If you are self-treating, before visiting the doctors, you need to stop the treatment for three days prior to visiting the doctors. Diagnosis will require visualization of blastospores or pseudohyphae on saline or 10% KOH microscopy or a positive culture in symptomatic woman. Latex agglutination tests may be used if it is a non-Candida albican strain because they do not demonstrate pseudohyphae on wet prep. Treatment requires the topical application of imidazole (miconazole, clotrimazole, butoconazole or terconazole in cream or suppository form placed intravaginally. Or a short-term oral therapy with low0dos *150mg) of fluconazole. Pregnant women should be treated with topical agents due to an increase in the risk of birth defects associated with high obese (400-800) of fluconazole. Although it has high cure rates, there is still a 20-30% chance of recurrence after 1 month. There is an option of weekly therapy with fluconazole for 6 months, which has been shown to be effective in preventing recurrent candidiasis in 50% of women. Intermittent therapy with topical agents weekly or twice weekly can be used as preventative care. When a patient is given antibiotics for systemic inflammation, they should be prescribed antifungal for ppx.

Trichomonas vulvovaginitis
This is an infection that is transmitted through sexual contact but can occur from fomites (poop) and oht tubs. It is assoicated with PID, endometritis, infertility, ectopic pregnancy and preterm birth. It often coexists with other sexually transmitted disease and BV. It has also been shown to facilitate HIV transmission. It can present with itching, burning copious discharge and an odor, as well as pain during urination and during sex. The discharge is often frothy, thin, yellow-green in color but even gray in color. pH is above 4.5. There may be edema or erythema of the vulva. On exam there could be strawberry patches in the cervix, but this is not often seen in every case. The diagnosis is confimred by microscopic examination of vaginal secretions in normal saline. THis wet smea will show large mature epithelial cells with WBC and trichomonas organisms. Those that are diagnosed with this should be screen for other STDs esepcially gonorrhea and chlamydia. It is treated with oral metronidzaole or tinidazole. Their sexual parter needs to be treated as well other wise it will lead to reinfection due to the partner not being treated because they stil lhave it. When on this medication, abstaine from alcohol because it will lead to disulfiram like reaction. Trichomoniasis is assosited with preterm delievery, PROM and low brith weight. Pregnant patiens should be treated and metronixazole is considered safe for use during pregnancy. However, treatemtn may not prevent these pregnacy complications. They do not need to be followed-up to see if it is gone. it is not cost- effective.

BV and trichomoniasis can be hard to distinguish so if you have symptoms, it is important to get it diagnosed. If it is trichomonias, you have these protozoans in the vaginal that need to be eliminated by metronidazole and also your partner needs to be treated for it.

Complete a​bsence of menstrual cycle (Amenorrhea)

There could be a complete absence of bleeding, called amenorrhea. In this post, I will only talk about the absence of menstruation. Then in another post, I will talk about abnormal bleeding (abnormal bleeding could be in the frequency, duration and the amount). You can skip to the paragraph that highlights your concern by looking at the bold writing of the first line.

My daughter is 15 years of age and has not had her period and looks to have developed breasts, armpit hair, and pubic hair.
Your daughter seems to have primary amenorrhea. Make an appointment with their primary care physician, pediatrician or OB/GYN specialist.

My daughter is 13 years of age and does not have signs of breast development, armpit hair, pubic hair nor her menstrual cycle.
Your daughter seems to have primary amenorrhea. Make an appointment with their primary care physician, pediatrician or OB/GYN specialist.

I haven’t menstruated regularly for the past 3 months and I usually have regular cycles!!! (or) I haven’t menstruated for the past 6 months and I usually have irregular cycles!!
This is secondary amenorrhea. You have had a menstrual cycle before, but now it doesn’t seem to be occurring. Usually, it is due to pregnancy. Grab a pregnancy test or go to your doctor and see if you are pregnant. The chances that an absence of menstrual cycle is caused by something other than pregnancy is 5% or less in these situations. If you have noticed that your breasts are fuller, you have gained weight and you feel nausea and possibly been vomiting lately, then this suggests you may be pregnant. You will need to have this confirmed with a pregnancy test which checks your level of hCG in your urine or in your blood.

You are not pregnant and are not having your periods (look above for timeline).
You need to be evaluated further by your doctor. Your doctor will do further tests to see why you aren’t getting your period. They will check your FSH, LH and prolactin levels in your blood to see if that tells a story about why you aren’t having your normal menstrual cycle. If you have low levels of FSH and LH levels, this may indicate you have a decrease in the production of these sex hormones, possibly due to your hypothalamus or anterior pituitary (both located in your brain). Don’t get too overwhelmed hearing that. Just relax. This is all potential talk. If the LH and FSH levels are normal but you have high prolactin levels, this could be the cause of your menstrual cycle abnormality and it may be due to an adenoma in the brain that is secreting prolactin in excess. This excess prolactin may be messing up with the sex hormones. Again, stay calm. Nothing is being diagnosed here. You would need to get the actual work up to get the actual diagnosis. There are a variety of causes of amenorrhea. You are learning some causes and when you go to your doctors you will have a better understanding of what high FSH and LH levels could mean. Or high prolactin levels. Let’s just discuss this without stressing. If your FSH and LH levels are high, then this could mean the ovaries are not being stimulated by the FSH and LH, which may be due to the ovaries not properly working.

History of dilation and curettage from a previous pregnancy and now you are not having regular menstrual cycles?
Then there could be a chance it is due to scarring of the uterine cavity, called Asherman syndrome. This is the most frequent anatomic cause of secondary cause of the absence of menses. If you had a history where you had D&C to remove retained pregnancy due to pregnancy, this has a risk of developing scarring of the endometrium. This then could lead to abnormal menses.

So what next?
You need to make an appointment with your doctor. Your doctor will ask you a variety of questions to establish where the problem could be. Then they will decide what steps to take, which is most likely taking some blood after initially checking for pregnancy with a urine test. Even if you say you are not sexually active, it is mandatory to rule out pregnancy. It isn’t because they don’t trust you, it is because it is protocol. They may do a progesterone test to see why you have an absence of menses and go from there.

I hope this gives you some understanding of what may be going on. Please, leave a comment below if you have any questions and I will be sure to answer it the best I can. My intention is to only teach and not make a diagnosis. You need to see your doctor for the appropriate diagnosis and next step in management.

Elective Clinical Rotation In the UK

My medical school recently added an elective rotation in a small town in England called Corby. There is a massive family medicine practice here called Lakeside Healthcare. You can do a 4-week elective rotation, which is what I did. Medical students from Cambridge and Leicester medical schools rotate here, and now students from my school can as well. Let’s just state it here and now, you are exposed to so many patients in this rotation, AND the most impressive part is that Lakeside Healthcare takes it to another level with their teaching: Medical students have their own rooms and system access to see patients by themselves before the general practitioners (GP) see them. Read on for schedule and experience.

As a Caribbean Medical student, you can be exposed to multiple hospital/clinic practices and I have traveled from NY (Richmond University Medical Center, Kingsbrook Jewish Hospital), to Michigan (Pontiac General Hospital), to Maryland (University of Maryland Medical Center). And now I have just finished my medical school career with my very last rotation in United Kingdom. All of which were my own choosing. This has multiple advantages of seeing how different hospitals run and it brings different exposure that you might not get by being in one single medical practice. Lakeside Healthcare was the first rotation where medical students are a huge part of the practice. It felt good.

A typical day in this elective: Come at 7:45 AM, log on to the medical record system and open the first patient’s chart. Call the patient in and grab history and physical exam. Then document it on their chart. Then present it to the attending either in front of the patient or before the patient is seen by the attending. After the presentation, we are asked about the potential diagnosis and indicate the next step in management. The physician then agrees or corrects. Then they talk to the patient for any further information and provide the final diagnosis and management. The patient then leaves the room and the physician briefly talks about the topic with the medical student. Then repeat! The medical student gets a full 15 minutes consultation time and then the attending gets 15 minutes of consultation time, which totals to 30 minutes with the patient. This is beneficial both for the patients, medical students and the general practioners. The patients get more face time and do not feel rushed; the students get the practice; the physicians get more information. Then after seeing patients for the morning, you go out for lunch, then come back and have a lecture on a topic.

During one of my patient encounterance, I went full Dr. Mursi, MD mode, where I counseled a pre-teenager whose mom had brought her in for depression. Initially I was in medical student mode, getting the history. However, realizing their intentions, I took full control of the appointment while charting everything that was discussed for the general practitioner (GP) to see. It felt really good to know I helped open doors to better conversations between mom and daughter. I was confident in my diagnosis of grief, provided some counseling and indicated the next step in management (of course, I informed the patient that the GP would make the final decision). This along with many of my other patient encounterance reminded me where I belong in the world of medicine. I am really excited to practice and have my own patients. I feel very content. It was also always fun to have the patient ask me where my accent was from.

Side note: In just about all of my rotations (especially fourth year) the patients I encounter, I indicate what I believe their diagnosis may be. Then tell them the next step in management. However, I always state that the GP will confirm this. This way, as a student, I am practicing diagnosing disease/conditions. I am practicing confidence, and also simply showing my knowledge to self and my patient. Often the patients will point out, “oh yeah, that’s what the medical student said”. This also makes you look good with the resident or attending you are working with.

Things I really appreciated:

  1. The patient exposure and student involvement. Rather than simply being asked to just observe patient and doctor interactions and then sometimes get asked to see a patient and present on them, students are expected to take history and physical and make a diagnosis and write up notes on the patient. Then they are expected to present it and indicate the next step in management. This is intimidating but you gain so much from it including confidence, knowledge and more efficient style of approaching patients. You are part of the schedule. It is always nice to be wanted as a medical student (doesn’t often happen)
  2. The coffee breaks! I think this is such a good idea to integrate into practice to allow for a breather for the physicians and the students.
  3. They provided access to a taxi cab company, which allowed me to travel within Corby. I just had to ring up the cab company and within minutes the cab was waiting for me! This was really convenient and it allowed me to venture out into the town center and etc. It definitely made it more comfortable to be there.
  4. They provided access to the swimming pool and the gym. This was great because I have been wanting to tone up and get healthier and it is located right by the practice. I simply walked over to the gym after work and then called the cab from the gym to get to the housing. It felt like a very productive day after work and the gym. I didn’t use the swimming pool so much, but it is one of the biggest one I have seen (it is an olympic size swimming pool).

Overall, it was one of my favorite rotation experiences. I do wish that I didn’t have two weeks of observation. This was due to my start date. I started with one set of students, who were on their last week of their 12-week rotation. Then I began with the next set of group. I ended up doing 2 weeks of observation. I was waiting to see patients on my own. I think it will be different for the next set of students as it will most likely be coordinated differently.


I definitely have to add that I am really grateful to have gotten this opportunity to see what medicine is like in the United Kingdom. I don’t think I can begin to explain how exciting it has been and the amazing opportunity I have been given. It was a pleasure to meet new people and get to know their thoughts in medicine and just as human beings. I have more thoughts and that will come in more blog posts.